99-12082. Section 8 Tenant-Based Assistance; Statutory Merger of Section 8 Certificate and Voucher Programs  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 93 (Friday, May 14, 1999)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 26632-26651]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-12082]
    
    
    
    [[Page 26631]]
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    Part V
    
    
    
    
    
    Department of Housing and Urban Development
    
    
    
    
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    
    
    24 CFR Part 248 et al.
    
    
    
    Section 8 Tenant-Based Assistance; Statutory Merger of Section 8 
    Certificate and Voucher Programs; Interim Rule
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 64, No. 93 / Friday, May 14, 1999 / Rules and 
    Regulations
    
    [[Page 26632]]
    
    
    
    DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
    
    24 CFR Parts 248, 791, 792 and 982
    
    [Docket No. FR-4428-I-01]
    RIN 2577-AB91
    
    
    Section 8 Tenant-Based Assistance; Statutory Merger of Section 8 
    Certificate and Voucher Programs
    
    AGENCY: Office of the Secretary, HUD.
    
    ACTION: Interim rule.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: This interim rule amends the regulations for the Section 8 
    tenant-based rental voucher program. These amendments implement 
    amendments of the United States Housing Act of 1937 by the Quality 
    Housing and Work Responsibility Act of 1998 and related changes. The 
    rule provides for the complete merger of the Section 8 tenant-based 
    Certificate and Voucher programs, into a new Housing Choice Voucher 
    Program.
    
    DATES: Effective date: August 12, 1999. Comments due date: Comments on 
    the interim rule and the proposed information collection requirements 
    are due on or before: July 13, 1999.
    
    ADDRESSES: Interested persons are invited to submit written comments 
    regarding this interim rule to the Rules Docket Clerk, Office of 
    General Counsel, Room 10276, Department of Housing and Urban 
    Development, 451 Seventh Street, SW, Washington, DC 20410. Comments 
    should refer to the above docket number and title. A copy of each 
    comment submitted will be available for public inspection and copying 
    between 7:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. weekdays at the above address. 
    Facsimile (FAX) comments will not be accepted.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Gerald J. Benoit, Office of Public and 
    Indian Housing, Department of Housing and Urban Development, Room 4210, 
    451 Seventh Street, SW, Washington, DC 20410; telephone (202) 708-0477 
    (this is not a toll-free number). Hearing or speech impaired 
    individuals may access this number via TTY by calling the toll-free 
    Federal Information Relay Service at 1-800-877-8339.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Section 8 Tenant-Based Program Statutory Provisions Implemented 
    in this Rule
    
        This interim rule implements most of the Section 8 tenant-based 
    program provisions contained in the Quality Housing and Work 
    Responsibility Act of 1998 (Title V of the FY 1999 HUD Appropriations 
    Act; Pub. L. 105-276, approved October 21, 1998; 112 Stat. 2461) (the 
    ``1998 Act''). Section 502 of the 1998 Act states that a purpose of the 
    legislation is ``consolidating the voucher and certificate programs for 
    rental assistance under Section 8 of the United States Housing Act of 
    1937 (the ``USH Act'' (42 U.S.C. 1437f)) into a single market-driven 
    program that will assist in making tenant-based rental assistance under 
    such section more successful at helping low-income families obtain 
    affordable housing and will increase housing choice for low-income 
    families.'' Of particular significance, this rule implements the merger 
    of the Section 8 tenant-based certificate and voucher programs (section 
    545 of the 1998 Act, amending 42 U.S.C. 1437f(o)).
    
    A. Description of the Housing Choice Voucher Program implemented by 
    this rule
    
        This rule implements provisions of the 1998 Act which will complete 
    merger of the Section 8 certificate and voucher programs into a single 
    new Section 8 voucher program (authorized under Section 8(o) of the USH 
    Act, 42 U.S.C. 1437f(o)), entitled the Housing Choice Voucher Program. 
    HUD has previously promulgated regulations (known as the ``conforming 
    rule'') which combined and conformed rules for Section 8 tenant-based 
    assistance to the extent permitted by prior law. The Housing Choice 
    Voucher Program has features of the previously authorized certificate 
    and voucher programs, plus new features. The following summarizes major 
    features of the Housing Choice Voucher Program:
        1. Payment standards. The subsidy amount is based on a payment 
    standard set by the Public Housing Agency (PHA) anywhere between 90% to 
    110% of the HUD-published fair market rent (FMR). HUD may approve 
    payment standards lower than 90% of FMR and payment standards higher 
    than 110% of FMR. Prior HUD-approved area exception rents will continue 
    to apply in the new voucher program (unless withdrawn or modified by 
    HUD). HUD may require PHA payment standard changes because of incidence 
    of high rent burdens (Section 8(o)(1)(B), (D) and (E) of the USH Act; 
    42 U.S.C. 1437f(o)(1)(B), (D) and (E); 24 CFR 982.503).
        2. Tenant payment. A family renting a unit below the payment 
    standard pays as gross rent the highest of: 30% of monthly adjusted 
    income, 10% of monthly income (gross income), the welfare rent (in 
    States where the welfare payment is adjusted in accordance with actual 
    housing costs), or the PHA-established statutory minimum rent. There is 
    no voucher ``shopping incentive'' (for a family that rents a unit below 
    the payment standard). A family renting a unit above the payment 
    standard pays the highest of 30% of monthly adjusted income, 10% of 
    monthly income, the welfare rent, or minimum rent, plus any rent above 
    the payment standard (Section 8(o)(2) (A) and (B) of the USH Act, 42 
    U.S.C. 1437f(o)(2) (A) and (B); Sec. 982.506(b)).
        3. Maximum initial rent burden. A family must not pay more than 40% 
    of adjusted income for rent when the family first receives Section 8 
    tenant-based assistance for occupancy of a particular unit. This new 
    requirement only applies for a family that initially receives tenant-
    based assistance for occupancy of a unit after the effective date of 
    this rule (called the ``merger date''). However, the maximum initial 
    rent burden requirement is not applicable if the family stays in the 
    same unit where the family initially received certificate or voucher 
    assistance for occupancy of the unit before the effective date of this 
    rule. The maximum initial rent burden requirement is applicable each 
    time a participant moves to a new unit. (Section 8(o)(3) of the USH 
    Act, 42 U.S.C. 1437f(o)(3); Sec. 982.508.)
        4. Income limits. Eligibility is limited to a:
        a. Very low-income family;
        b. Low-income family continuously assisted under the public 
    housing, Section 23, or Section 8 programs;
        c. Low-income family that is a nonpurchasing tenant in certain 
    homeownership programs;
        d. Low-income or moderate-income family that is displaced as a 
    result of the prepayment of the mortgage or voluntary termination of an 
    insurance contract on eligible low-income housing as defined at 24 CFR 
    248.101; or
        e. Low-income family that meets PHA-specified criteria. (Section 
    8(o)(4) of the USH Act, 42 U.S.C. 1437f(o)(4); Sec. 982.201(a)(1) of 
    the regulations.)
        5. Applicant selection. PHA applicant selection preferences must be 
    based on local housing needs and priorities. In determining the 
    preferences, the PHA must use ``generally accepted data sources'' 
    including public comments on the PHA plan and the Consolidated Plan. 
    PHAs are urged to consider adopting admission preferences for victims 
    of domestic violence (Section 8(o)(6)(A) of the USH Act, 42 U.S.C. 
    1437f(o)(6)(A); Sec. 982.208).
        6. Optional PHA screening of applicants. Although the screening and 
    selection of tenants will remain the function of the owner, the PHA may 
    elect to screen applicants in accordance with any HUD requirements 
    (Section
    
    [[Page 26633]]
    
    8(o)(6)(B) of the USH Act, 42 U.S.C. 1437f(o)(6)(B); 
    Sec. 982.307(a)(1)).
        7. Optional PHA disapproval of owners. The PHA may refuse to enter 
    into new Section 8 Housing Assistance Payment (HAP) contracts with 
    owners who refuse (or have a history of refusing) to evict families for 
    drug-related or violent criminal activity, or for activity that 
    threatens the health, safety or right of peaceful enjoyment of the (1) 
    premises by tenants, PHA employees or owner employees, or (2) the 
    residences by neighbors (Section 8(o)(6)(C) of the USH Act, 42 U.S.C. 
    1437f(o)(6)(C); Sec. 982.306(c)(5)).
        8. Initial lease term. The PHA may approve an initial lease term of 
    less than 1 year if a lease of less than 1 year is prevailing local 
    practice and the PHA determines that the shorter term will improve 
    housing opportunities for the family (Section 8(o)(7)(A) of the USH 
    Act, 42 U.S.C. 1437f(o)(7)(A); Sec. 982.309(a)).
        9. Lease form and content. The lease form must be in the standard 
    form used in the locality by the owner. The lease must contain terms 
    that are consistent with State and local law, and that apply generally 
    to unassisted tenants in the same property. The HAP contract and the 
    lease must contain the HUD prescribed tenancy addendum (Section 
    8(o)(7)(B) and (F) of the USH Act, 42 U.S.C. 1437f(o)(7)(B) and (F); 
    Sec. 982.308).
        10. HQS. Units must pass the federally established HQS or 
    substitute local housing codes or codes adopted by PHAs. Substitute 
    local housing codes or codes adopted by PHAs: (a) cannot severely 
    restrict housing choice; and (b) must meet or exceed the HQS (unless 
    HUD approves a lower standard that does not adversely affect the health 
    or safety of families, and will significantly increase affordable 
    housing access and expand housing opportunities) (Section 8(o)(8)(B) of 
    the USH Act, 42 U.S.C. 1437f(o)(8)(B); Sec. 982.401(a)(4)).
        11. Fifteen calendar day initial HQS inspection deadline. PHAs with 
    1,250 or fewer tenant-based Section 8 units must conduct initial HQS 
    inspections within 15 days after receipt of an inspection request from 
    the family and owner. PHAs with more than 1,250 tenant-based Section 8 
    units must conduct initial HQS inspections within a ``reasonable 
    period'' of the family's and owner's inspection request (Section 
    8(o)(8)(C) of the USH Act, 42 U.S.C. 1437f(o)(8)(C); 
    Sec. 982.305(b)(2)).
        12. PHA penalties for late payment of housing assistance to owners. 
    In the future, the HAP contract will provide for penalties against the 
    PHA for late payment of the housing assistance payment to the owner. 
    Any late payment penalties may only be imposed in accordance with 
    generally accepted practices in the local housing market governing 
    penalties for late payment of rent by a tenant. For example, the PHA 
    may be required to pay a late fee to an owner if the housing assistance 
    payment is not paid by the tenth day of the month if it is local 
    practice that an unassisted tenant is charged a late fee when the rent 
    has not been paid in full by the tenth day of each month. A late 
    payment fee may only be paid from the PHA's administrative fee income 
    (including available amounts in the HA administrative fee reserve). The 
    PHA is not obligated to pay any late fee if HUD determines that the 
    late payment is due to factors beyond the control of the PHA (e.g., 
    late receipt of the Section 8 funds from Treasury). The rule also 
    provides that the PHA may add HAP contract provisions which define when 
    the HAP payment by the PHA is deemed received by the owner (e.g., upon 
    mailing by the PHA or actual receipt by the owner). (Section 
    8(o)(10)(D) and (E) of the USH Act, 42 U.S.C. 1437f(o)(10)(D) and (E); 
    Sec. 982.451(b)(5).)
        13. HQS inspections and rent reasonableness determinations for PHA-
    owned units. The local government or another independent entity 
    approved by HUD must conduct HQS inspections and rent reasonableness 
    determinations for PHA-owned units leased by voucher holders. The PHA 
    must pay any expenses associated with the performance of such 
    inspections and rent determinations. The PHA and the independent agency 
    may not charge the family any fee or charge for the services provided 
    by the independent agency. The HA may use administrative fee income to 
    compensate the independent agency for its services, but may not use 
    other program receipts for this purpose (Section 8(o)(11) of the USH 
    Act, 42 U.S.C. 1437f(o)(11); Sec. 982.352(b)).
        14. Subsidy amount for manufactured homeowners leasing pads. The 
    subsidy amount for expenses associated with pad leasing by a mobile 
    home owner are revised to mirror the subsidy calculation method for 
    families leasing ``regular'' units (Section 8(o)(12) of the USH Act, 42 
    U.S.C. 1437f(o)(12); Sec. 982.623).
        15. Income Targeting. Not less than 75% of new admissions to the 
    tenant-based voucher assistance program must have incomes at or below 
    30% of the area median income. Other admissions generally must be at or 
    below 80% of the area median. If two or more PHAs have identical 
    jurisdiction, those PHAs must jointly meet the targeting goals (section 
    513 of the 1998 Act; Sec. 982.201(a)(2) of the regulations).
        16. Section 8 PHA definition. For the administration of tenant-
    based assistance only, a ``PHA'' includes:
        a. A consortia of PHAs,
        b. A nonprofit entity administering certificates or vouchers under 
    a contract with a PHA or HUD on enactment of the 1998 Act (on October 
    21, 1998); or
        c. For any area outside the jurisdiction of a PHA that is 
    administering a tenant-based program, or where HUD determines that such 
    PHA is not administering the program effectively, a private non-profit 
    entity or public body that would otherwise lack jurisdiction to 
    administer the program in such area (section 546 of the 1998 Act; 
    definition of ``public housing agency'' at Sec. 982.4 of the 
    regulations).
        17. Section 8 ``endless lease'' and owner termination notices. The 
    ``endless lease'' provision and the 90-day owner termination notice are 
    permanently repealed (section 549 of the 1998 Act; revisions to 
    Secs. 982.310 and 982.454 ).
        18. Technical and conforming amendments including elimination of 
    Section 8 SRO approvals. The requirements for a HUD determination of a 
    significant demand for SROs, PHA and local government approval of SRO 
    use, and a PHA and local government certification that the SRO meets 
    local SRO health and safety standards have been eliminated (section 550 
    of the 1998 Act; revisions to Sec. 982.602).
        19. Portability. The 1998 Act grants the statutory right of 
    nationwide participant portability to the jurisdiction of any PHA that 
    is administering the Section 8 voucher program. This right was 
    previously established by HUD's program regulation. PHAs may opt to 
    require applicants who were nonresidents at the time of application to 
    live in the PHA's jurisdiction during the first year. PHAs must not 
    issue a participant a new voucher for a portable move if the family has 
    moved out of the family's unit in violation of the lease (section 553 
    of the 1998 Act; Sec. 982.353).
        20. Elimination of ``take-one, take-all'' provision. The ``take-
    one, take-all'' provision is permanently eliminated. This provision 
    required that an owner who entered into a Section 8 HAP contract on 
    behalf of any tenant in a multifamily housing project could not refuse 
    to lease otherwise affordable units in all multifamily projects of the 
    owner if the reason for the refusal was that the family was a 
    certificate or voucher holder (section 554 of the 1998 Act permanently 
    repeals Section 8(t) of the USH Act, 42 U.S.C. 1437f(t); this rule 
    therefore removes the regulatory provision (prior Sec. 982.457) that 
    recited the prior take-one-take-all statutory requirement).
    
    [[Page 26634]]
    
        21. Intellectual property rights. The 1998 Act prohibits use of 
    program receipts to indemnify PHA contractors or subcontractors against 
    costs associated with any judgment of infringement of intellectual 
    property rights (section 510 of the 1998 Act; Sec. 982.157).
    
    B. Transition to the New Housing Choice Voucher Program
    
        The majority of changes necessary to merge the certificate and 
    voucher programs into a single tenant-based program were accomplished 
    by issuing the Section 8 certificate and voucher conforming rule 
    published in three phases: in 1994, 1995, and 1998. The remaining 
    significant differences between the certificate and voucher programs 
    are the subsidy amount, the maximum allowable initial contract rent 
    levels and contract rent adjustments. The treatment of these program 
    differences in the transition of pre-merger certificates and pre-merger 
    vouchers to the final merger of the two programs, as enacted by 
    Congress, is addressed below.
        1. Requirement to only enter HAP contracts under the Housing Choice 
    Voucher Program in the future, and treatment of outstanding pre-merger 
    certificates. The new regulation becomes effective 90 days from 
    publication of this rule. This date is called the ``merger date'' 
    (Sec. 982.4).
        This rule provides that on and after the merger date, a PHA may 
    only enter HAP contracts under the Housing Choice Voucher Program 
    implemented by this rule. If an applicant family or a participant 
    wishing to move has been issued a pre-merger certificate, the PHA may 
    opt to: (a) let the family continue to search for housing during the 
    term of the pre-merger certificate; or (b) issue the family a voucher 
    under the Housing Choice Voucher Program for a new term.
        In any event, the PHA may only enter into HAP contracts under the 
    Housing Choice Voucher Program on and after the merger date. Thus, an 
    applicant or participant family who received a pre-merger certificate 
    must be assisted under the Housing Choice Voucher Program if a tenant-
    based HAP contract has not been executed on their behalf prior to the 
    merger date.
        2. Treatment of pre-merger voucher assistance under the Housing 
    Choice Voucher Program. On the merger date, participants in the pre-
    merger voucher program automatically become participants in the Housing 
    Choice Voucher Program. Existing voucher contracts provide that the 
    housing assistance payment must be calculated in accordance with HUD 
    requirements. However, the HAP contracts do not specify the amount of 
    or method of computing the housing assistance payment.
        In accordance with Sec. 982.502 of the interim rule, the method of 
    calculating subsidy under the Housing Choice Voucher Program is applied 
    commencing at the effective date of the second regular reexamination of 
    family income and composition on or after the merger date. Thus, a 
    family receiving a shopping incentive under the pre-merger voucher 
    program will continue to receive any shopping incentive for the pre-
    merger unit until the family's second regular reexamination on or after 
    the merger date. However, execution of a Housing Choice Voucher Program 
    HAP contract may be deferred until the next time a HAP contract would 
    otherwise be executed in accordance with program requirements.
        3. Conversion of pre-merger over-FMR certificates to vouchers under 
    the Housing Choice Voucher Program. On the merger date, over-FMR 
    tenancy participants in the pre-merger certificate program 
    automatically become participants in the Housing Choice Voucher 
    Program. Existing HAP contracts for an over-FMR tenancy provide that 
    the housing assistance payment must be calculated in accordance with 
    HUD requirements. However, the HAP contracts do not specify the amount 
    of or method of computing the housing assistance payment. Consistent 
    with Sec. 982.502 of this interim rule, the new method of calculating 
    subsidy under the Housing Choice Voucher Program is applied commencing 
    at the effective date of the second regular reexamination of family 
    income and composition on or after the merger date.
        Conversion of an over-FMR tenancy certificate unit to the Housing 
    Choice Voucher Program is not dependent upon execution of a Housing 
    Choice Voucher Program HAP contract. Execution of a Housing Choice 
    Voucher Program HAP contract may be deferred until the next time a HAP 
    contract would otherwise be executed in accordance with program 
    requirements.
        4. Conversion of pre-merger regular tenancy certificate assistance 
    to voucher assistance under the Housing Choice Voucher Program. A 
    regular tenancy certificate participant will automatically become a 
    participant in the Housing Choice Voucher Program when the PHA executes 
    a new HAP contract on their behalf on or after the merger date--whether 
    for the same unit or for a new unit. The PHA must terminate assistance 
    under any outstanding regular certificate HAP contract (entered before 
    the merger date) at the effective date of the second regular 
    reexamination of family income and composition on or after the merger 
    date.
        All existing certificate tenancies must be converted to the Housing 
    Choice Voucher Program (Sec. 982.502(d)). However, until conversion 
    there is no change in pre-merger certificate program requirements for 
    calculation of housing assistance payments, including annual 
    adjustments and special adjustments to the contract rent 
    (Secs. 982.507, 509, and 510 of the pre-merger regulations which are 
    renumbered as Secs. 982.518, 982.519, and 982.520 in the Housing Choice 
    Voucher Program regulations).
    
    II. Section 8 Tenant-Based Program Statutory Provisions Not 
    Included in This Rule
    
        This interim rule does not include every statutory change affecting 
    the Section 8 tenant-based programs. A listing of the implementation 
    method for tenant-based statutory provisions not included in this rule 
    follows.
    
    A. Part 5 and Part 984 Regulations Being Published Separately
    
        Other provisions of the 1998 Act affecting the Section 8 
    certificate and voucher programs are being addressed in a separate 
    proposed rule amending 24 CFRs parts 5 and 984. This rule was published 
    in the Federal Register on April 30, 1999 (64 FR 23460) and includes 
    the following provisions: the minimum rent requirements (section 507 of 
    the 1998 Act); elimination of federal preferences (section 514 of the 
    1998 Act); income targeting requirements (section 513 of the 1998 Act); 
    elimination of Section 8 selection preference for public housing 
    residents based on prior federal preference status (section 514 of the 
    1998 Act); elimination of the admission preference for elderly, 
    disabled and displaced persons before other single persons (section 
    506(2)(A) of the 1998 Act); computer matching income verification 
    information requirements (Section 8(o)(5)(A) of the USH Act, 42 U.S.C. 
    1437f(o)(5)(A)); revisions to the definitions of annual income and 
    adjusted income (section 508 of the 1998 Act); revision to the minimum 
    FSS program size (section 509 of the 1998 Act); and tenant rent welfare 
    sanctions (section 512 of the 1998 Act). Further, the regulatory 
    conforming changes to reflect the statutory revisions to restrictions 
    on assistance to noncitizens (section 592 of the 1998 Act) are being 
    addressed in a separate final rule.
    
    [[Page 26635]]
    
    B. Section 8 Tenant-Based Homeownership Program
    
        Sections 545 and 555 of the 1998 Act provide that PHAs may opt to 
    implement a Section 8 tenant-based homeownership program. HUD is 
    issuing a separate proposed rule to implement the Section 8 tenant-
    based homeownership program. The homeownership proposed rule was 
    published in the Federal Register on April 30, 1999 (64 FR 23488).
    
    C. Section 8 Tenant-Based Renewal Funds
    
        Section 556 of the 1998 Act requires HUD to establish the renewal 
    funding process for tenant-based assistance in a regulation. Beginning 
    October 1, 1998, HUD must renew expiring tenant-based Annual 
    Contributions Contracts (ACCs) by applying a localized inflation factor 
    to an allocation baseline that includes, at a minimum, ``amounts 
    sufficient to ensure continued assistance for the actual number of 
    families assisted on October 1, 1997, with appropriate upward 
    adjustments for incremental assistance and additional families 
    authorized subsequent to that date.'' HUD notice PIH 98-65 dated 
    December 30, 1998 outlines the tenant-based renewal funding allocation 
    policies for federal fiscal year 1999 assistance used to renew funding 
    increments expiring between January 1, 1999 and December 31, 1999. 
    Calendar year 2000 funding for the renewal of Section 8 certificate and 
    voucher ACCs will be allocated pursuant to a negotiated final rule 
    which will be published on or before October 21, 1999.
    
    D. PHA Plan
    
        The PHA Plan interim rule (section 511 of the 1998 Act) was 
    published in the Federal Register on February 18, 1999 (64 FR 8170).
    
    E. Project-Based Vouchers
    
        Revisions to the rules for the project-based voucher/certificate 
    program will be implemented in a future rulemaking (Section 8(o)(13) of 
    the USH Act).
    
    F. PHA Access to Criminal Conviction Records and Crime and Alcohol 
    Abuse Provisions
    
        PHA access to criminal conviction records for Section 8 applicants 
    and tenants (section 575 of the 1998 Act) and other crime and alcohol 
    abuse provisions will be implemented through future rulemaking or 
    guidance.
    
    G. Other Miscellaneous Statutory Provisions
    
        Initial guidance on the 1998 Act provisions that are already 
    effective was provided in notices published in the Federal Register on 
    February 18, 1999 (64 FR 8192) and April 30, 1999 (64 FR 23344). HUD 
    will continue to provide regulatory and other guidance, as appropriate, 
    for all remaining provisions of the 1998 Act.
    
    III. Public Participation in This Rulemaking
    
        HUD is issuing this interim rule under the statutory authority 
    provided by section 559 of the 1998 Act. Section 559 provides that the 
    Secretary of HUD ``shall issue such interim regulations as may be 
    necessary to implement the amendments made by [the 1998 Act] which 
    relate to Section 8(o) of the [USH Act].'' Section 559 also requires 
    that before the final rule is published, HUD will seek the 
    recommendations on the implementation of the new Housing Choice Voucher 
    Program from organizations representing: (1) State or local PHAs; (2) 
    Owners and managers of tenant-based housing assistance under Section 8 
    of the USH Act; and (3) legal services organizations. Section 559 also 
    requires HUD to convene not less than two public forums at which the 
    persons or organizations making recommendations may express their views 
    concerning the proposed disposition of their recommendations. The 
    dates, times and locations of the first two public forums were 
    announced in the Federal Register on April 27, 1999 (64 FR 22550).
        In addition to the general solicitation of public comments on this 
    interim rule, HUD specifically seeks through this rulemaking 
    recommendations on implementation of the Housing Choice Voucher Program 
    from the four groups mentioned above: (1) State or local PHAs; (2) 
    Owners and managers of tenant-based housing assistance under section 8 
    of the USH Act; (3) families receiving tenant-based assistance under 
    section 8 of the USH Act; and (4) legal services organizations.
    
    IV. Justification for Interim Rulemaking
    
        HUD generally publishes a rule for public comment before issuing a 
    rule for effect, in accordance with its own regulations on rulemaking 
    in 24 CFR part 10. Part 10, however, provides that prior notice and 
    public comment may be omitted if ``a statute expressly so authorizes'' 
    (24 CFR 10.1). This interim rule implements those provisions of the 
    1998 Act which complete the merger of the Section 8 certificate and 
    voucher programs into a single new Section 8 voucher program 
    (authorized under Section 8(o) of the USH Act, 42 U.S.C. 1437f(o)), 
    entitled the Housing Choice Voucher Program. As noted above, section 
    559 of the 1998 Act provides that the Secretary of HUD ``shall issue 
    such interim regulations as may be necessary to implement the 
    amendments made by [the 1998 Act] which relate to Section 8(o) of the 
    [USH Act].'' Accordingly, HUD is issuing this interim rule for effect 
    without prior notice and comment.
        HUD recognizes the value and necessity of public comment in the 
    development of its regulations. HUD has therefore issued these 
    regulations on an interim basis and has provided the public with a 60-
    day comment period. Additionally, HUD has provided for a 90-day delayed 
    effective date for this interim rule (in contrast to the customary 30-
    day delayed effective date for most HUD rules), in order to afford PHAs 
    additional time to prepare for the implementation of the interim rule. 
    Further, HUD has scheduled three public forums to discuss 
    implementation of the Housing Choice Voucher Program. HUD welcomes 
    comment on the regulatory amendments made by this interim rule. Public 
    comments will be addressed in the final rule.
    
    V. Findings and Certifications
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        (a) The proposed information collection requirements contained in 
    this rule have been submitted to the Office of Management and Budget 
    (OMB) for review, under section 3507(d) of the Paperwork Reduction Act 
    of 1995 (44 U.S.C. Chapter 35). An agency may not conduct or sponsor, 
    and a person is not required to respond to, a collection of information 
    unless the collection displays a valid control number.
        (b) In accordance with 5 CFR 1320.5(a)(1)(iv), HUD estimates that 
    the total reporting and recordkeeping burden that will result from the 
    proposed collection of information as follows:
    
    BILLING CODE 4210-32-P
    
    [[Page 26636]]
    
    [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR14MY99.095
    
    
    
    [[Page 26637]]
    
    [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR14MY99.096
    
    
    
    [[Page 26638]]
    
        (c) In accordance with 5 CFR 1320.8(d)(1), the Department is 
    soliciting comments from members of the public and affected agencies 
    concerning the proposed collection of information to:
        (1) Evaluate whether the proposed collection of information is 
    necessary for the proper performance of the functions of the agency, 
    including whether the information will have practical utility;
        (2) Evaluate the accuracy of the agency's estimate of the burden of 
    the proposed collection of information;
        (3) Enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the information to 
    be collected; and
        (4) Minimize the burden of the collection of information on those 
    who are to respond; including through the use of appropriate automated 
    collection techniques or other forms of information technology, e.g., 
    permitting electronic submission of responses.
        Interested persons are invited to submit comments regarding the 
    information collection requirements in this proposal. Under the 
    provisions of 5 CFR part 1320, OMB is required to make a decision 
    concerning this collection of information between 30 and 60 days after 
    today's publication date. Therefore, a comment on the information 
    collection requirements is best assured of having its full effect if 
    OMB receives the comment within 30 days of today's publication. This 
    time frame does not affect the deadline for comments to the agency on 
    the interim rule, however. Comments must refer to the rule by name and 
    docket number (FR-4428) and must be sent to:
    
    Joseph F. Lackey, Jr., HUD Desk Officer, Office of Management and 
    Budget, New Executive Office Building, Washington, DC 20503
        and
    Gerald J. Benoit, Office of Public and Indian Housing, Department of 
    Housing and Urban Development, Room 4210, 451 Seventh Street, SW, 
    Washington, DC 20410
    
    Environmental Impact
    
        A Finding of No Significant Impact with respect to the environment 
    was made in accordance with HUD regulations in 24 CFR part 50 that 
    implement section 102(2)(C) of the National Environmental Policy Act of 
    1969 (42 U.S.C. 4223). The Finding is available for public inspection 
    between 7:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. weekdays in the Office of the Rules 
    Docket Clerk, Office of General Counsel, Room 10276, Department of 
    Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street, SW, Washington, DC.
    
    Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
    
        Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (2 U.S.C. 
    1531-1538) establishes requirements for Federal agencies to assess the 
    effects of their regulatory actions on State, local, and tribal 
    governments and the private sector. This interim rule does not impose 
    any Federal mandates on any State, local, or tribal governments or the 
    private sector within the meaning of Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 
    1995.
    
    Executive Order 12866
    
        The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) reviewed this interim 
    rule under Executive Order 12866, Regulatory Planning and Review. OMB 
    determined that this interim rule is a ``significant regulatory 
    action,'' as defined in section 3(f) of the Order (although not 
    economically significant, as provided in section 3(f)(1) of the Order). 
    Any changes made to the interim rule subsequent to its submission to 
    OMB are identified in the docket file, which is available for public 
    inspection in the office of the Department's Rules Docket Clerk, Room 
    10276, 451 Seventh Street, SW, Washington, DC 20410-0500.
    
    Impact on Small Entities
    
        The Secretary, in accordance with the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 
    U.S.C. 605(b)) (the RFA), has reviewed and approved this interim rule 
    and in so doing certifies that this rule would not have a significant 
    economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. The reasons 
    for HUD's determination are as follows:
        (1) A Substantial Number of Small Entities Will Not be Affected. 
    The interim rule is exclusively concerned with public housing agencies 
    that administer tenant-based housing assistance under Section 8 of the 
    United States Housing Act of 1937. Specifically, the interim rule would 
    establish requirements governing tenant-based assistance for an 
    eligible family. Under the definition of ``Small governmental 
    jurisdiction'' in section 601(5) of the RFA, the provisions of the RFA 
    are applicable only to those few public housing agencies that are part 
    of a political jurisdiction with a population of under 50,000 persons. 
    The number of entities potentially affected by this rule is therefore 
    not substantial.
        (2) No Significant Economic Impact. The interim regulatory 
    amendments would not change the amount of funding available under the 
    Section 8 voucher program. Accordingly, the economic impact of this 
    rule will not be significant, and it will not affect a substantial 
    number of small entities.
        Notwithstanding HUD's determination that this rule will not have a 
    significant economic effect on a substantial number of small entities, 
    HUD specifically invites comments regarding any less burdensome 
    alternatives to this rule that will meet HUD's objectives as described 
    in this preamble.
    
    Executive Order 12612, Federalism
    
        The General Counsel, as the Designated Official for HUD under 
    section 6(a) of Executive Order 12612, Federalism, has determined that 
    this rule will not have federalism implications concerning the division 
    of local, State, and Federal responsibilities. No programmatic or 
    policy change under this rule will affect the relationship between the 
    Federal government and State and local governments.
    
    Catalog of Domestic Assistance Numbers
    
        The Catalog of Domestic Assistance numbers for the programs 
    affected by this interim rule are 14.146, 14.147, 14.850, 14.851, 
    14.852, 14.855, 14.857, and 15.141.
    
    List of Subjects
    
    24 CFR Part 248
    
        Intergovernmental relations, Loan programs--housing and community 
    development, Low and moderate income housing, Mortgage insurance, 
    Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    24 CFR Part 791
    
        Grant programs--housing and community development, Housing, Rent 
    subsidies.
    
    24 CFR Part 792
    
        Fraud, Grant programs--housing and community development, Rent 
    subsidies, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    24 CFR Part 982
    
        Grant programs--housing and community development, Housing, Rent 
    subsidies.
    
        For the reasons discussed in the preamble, HUD amends 24 CFR parts 
    248, 791, 792, and 982 as follows:
    
    PART 248--PREPAYMENT OF LOW INCOME HOUSING MORTGAGES
    
        1. The authority citation for part 248 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1715l note, 4101 note, and 4101-4124; 42 
    U.S.C. 3535(d).
    
    
    Sec. 248.101  [Amended]
    
        2. Amend Sec. 248.101 as follows:
    
    [[Page 26639]]
    
        a. In the definition of ``Adjusted income'' revise the references 
    to ``Sec. 813.106'' and ``Sec. 813.102'' to read ``part 5''.
        b. In the definition of ``Fair market rent'', revise the reference 
    to ``Sec. 882.102'' to read ``Sec. 982.4''; and
        c. In the definition of ``Low Income Families'', revise the 
    reference to ``part 813'' to read ``part 5''.
        d. In the definition of ``Section 8 assistance'', after the words 
    ``880 through 887'', add the words ``and 982 and 983''.
        e. In the definition of ``Special Needs Tenants'' revise the 
    reference to ``Sec. 812.2'' to read ``part 5''.
        f. In the definition of ``Very Low Income Families'', revise the 
    reference to ``Sec. 813.102'' to ``part 5''.
    
    
    Sec. 248.141   [Amended]
    
        3. Amend Sec. 248.141(c)(3) by removing the reference to 
    ``certificate and''.
    
    
    Sec. 248.147   [Amended]
    
        4. In Sec. 248.147(e)(1), revise the references to ``parts 882 and 
    887'' in the first and second sentences to read in each place ``part 
    982''.
        5. Amend Sec. 248.165 as follows:
        a. Revise paragraph (a) as set forth below; and
        b. In paragraph (i), revise the reference to ``assistance under 
    parts 882 or 887 of this title'' to read ``tenant-based assistance 
    under the Housing Choice Voucher Program''.
    
    
    Sec. 248.165  Assistance for displaced tenants.
    
        (a) Section 8 assistance. Each low income family that is displaced 
    as a result of the prepayment of the mortgage, or voluntary termination 
    of an insurance contract, on eligible low income housing shall, subject 
    to the availability of funds, be offered the opportunity to receive 
    tenant-based assistance under the Housing Choice Voucher Program in 
    accordance with part 982 of this title.
    * * * * *
        6. Revise Sec. 248.173(m)(2) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 248.173  Resident homeownership program.
    
    * * * * *
        (m) * * *
        (2) Section 8 assistance. If a tenant decides not to purchase a 
    unit, or is not qualified to do so, the Commissioner shall ensure that 
    tenant-based assistance under the Housing Choice Voucher Program in 
    accordance with part 982 of this title is available for use in that or 
    another property by each tenant that meets the eligibility requirements 
    thereunder.
    * * * * *
    
    
    Sec. 248.201   [Amended]
    
        7. Amend Sec. 248.201 as follows:
        a. In the definition of ``Low-income Families'', revise the 
    reference to ``part 813'' to read ``part 5'';
        b. In the definition of ``Very Low Income Families'', revise the 
    reference to ``under Sec. 813.102 of this title'' to read ``under 
    section 3(b) of the 1937 Act (42 U.S.C. 1437a(b))''.
    
    PART 791--ALLOCATIONS OF HOUSING ASSISTANCE FUNDS
    
        8. Revise the heading of part 791 to read as set forth above.
        9. The authority citation for part 791 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1439 and 3535(d).
    
        10. Revise Sec. 791.101 to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 791.101  Applicability and scope.
    
        This part describes the role and responsibility of HUD in 
    allocation of budget authority (pursuant to section 213 of the Housing 
    and Community Development Act of 1974 (42 U.S.C. 1439)) for housing 
    assistance under the United States Housing Act of 1937 (Section 8 and 
    public housing) and under section 101 of the Housing and Urban 
    Development Act of 1965 (12 U.S.C. 1701s), and of budget authority for 
    housing assistance under section 202 of the Housing Act of 1959 (12 
    U.S.C. 1710q). This part does not apply to budget authority for the 
    public housing operating fund or capital fund.
        11. Amend Sec. 791.102 as follows:
        a. Remove the definitions of ``Application for housing 
    assistance'', ``Chief executive officer'', ``Household type'', 
    ``Housing type'', ``Local government'', ``Tenure type'', and ``Urban 
    county'';
        b. Amend the definition of ``Allocation area'' by removing the 
    reference to ``or Indian areas''; and
        c. Revise the definition of ``Public housing agency'' as set forth 
    below.
    
    
    Sec. 791.102  Definitions.
    
    * * * * *
        Public housing agency (PHA). (1) Any State, county, municipality, 
    or other governmental entity or public body which is authorized to 
    administer a program under the 1937 Act (or an agency or 
    instrumentality of such an entity).
        (2) In addition, for purposes of the program of Section 8 tenant-
    based assistance under part 982 of this title, the term PHA also 
    includes any of the following:
        (i) A consortia of housing agencies, each of which meets the 
    qualifications in paragraph (1) of this definition, that HUD determines 
    has the capacity and capability to efficiently administer the program 
    (in which case, HUD may enter into a consolidated ACC with any legal 
    entity authorized to act as the legal representative of the consortia 
    members);
        (ii) Any other public or private non-profit entity that was 
    administering a Section 8 tenant-based assistance program pursuant to a 
    contract with the contract administrator of such program (HUD or a PHA) 
    in effect on October 21, 1998; or
        (iii) For any area outside the jurisdiction of a PHA that is 
    administering a tenant-based program, or where HUD determines that such 
    PHA is not administering the program effectively, a private non-profit 
    entity or a governmental entity or public body that would otherwise 
    lack jurisdiction to administer the program in such area.
    
    Subpart C--[Removed and Reserved]
    
        12. Remove and reserve subpart C.
    
    
    Sec. 791.401  [Amended]
    
        13. In Sec. 791.401, revise the reference to ``Sec. 791.101(a)'' to 
    read ``Sec. 791.101''.
        14. Amend Sec. 791.402 as follows:
        a. Remove paragraph (c)(2) and redesignate paragraph (c)(1) as 
    paragraph (c); and
        b. Revise paragraph (d) as set forth below.
    
    
    Sec. 791.402  Determination of low-income housing needs.
    
    * * * * *
        (d) Based on the criteria in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this 
    section, the Assistant Secretary for Policy Development and Research 
    shall establish housing needs factors for each county and independent 
    city in the field office jurisdiction, and shall aggregate the factors 
    for such jurisdiction. The field office total for each factor is then 
    divided by the respective national total for that factor. The resulting 
    housing needs ratios under paragraph (b) of this section are then 
    weighted to provide housing needs percentages for each field office, 
    using the following weights: population--20 percent; poverty--20 
    percent; housing overcrowding--10 percent; housing vacancies--10 
    percent; substandard housing--20 percent; other objectively measurable 
    conditions--20 percent. For the section 202 elderly program, the two 
    criteria described in paragraph (c) of this section are weighted 
    equally.
    * * * * *
    
    [[Page 26640]]
    
        15. Amend Sec. 791.403 to revise paragraphs (a) and (b)(1)(i) to 
    read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 791.403  Allocation of housing assistance.
    
        (a) The total budget authority available for any fiscal year shall 
    be determined by adding any available unreserved budget authority from 
    prior fiscal years to any newly appropriated budget authority for each 
    housing program.
        (b) * * *
        (1) * * *
        (i) Amendments of existing contracts, renewal of assistance 
    contracts, assistance to families that would otherwise lose assistance 
    due to the decision of the project owner to prepay the project mortgage 
    or not to renew the assistance contract, assistance to prevent 
    displacement or to provide replacement housing in connection with the 
    demolition or disposition of public housing, assistance in support of 
    the property disposition and loan management functions of the 
    Secretary;
    * * * * *
        16. Revise Sec. 791.404(c) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 791.404  Field Office allocation planning.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) Determining the amount of budget authority. Where the field 
    office establishes more than one allocation area, it shall determine 
    the amount of budget authority to be allocated to each allocation area, 
    based upon a housing needs percentage which represents the needs of 
    that area relative to the field office jurisdiction. For each program, 
    a composite housing needs percentage developed under Sec. 791.402 for 
    those counties and independent cities comprising the allocation area 
    shall be aggregated into allocation area totals.
    * * * * *
    
    PART 792--PUBLIC HOUSING AGENCY SECTION 8 FRAUD RECOVERIES
    
        17. Revise the heading of part 792 to read as set forth above.
        18. The authority citation for 24 CFR part 792 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437f note and 3535(d).
    
    PART 792--[AMENDED]
    
        19. In part 792, revise all references to ``HA'' to read ``PHA''.
        20. Revise Sec. 792.101 to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 792.101  Purpose.
    
        The purpose of this part is to encourage public housing agencies 
    (PHAs) to investigate and pursue instances of tenant and owner fraud 
    and abuse in the operation of the Section 8 housing assistance payments 
    programs.
    
    
    Sec. 792.102  [Amended]
    
        21. Amend Sec. 792.102 as follows:
        a. In paragraphs (a) and (b), revise the reference to ``an HA'' to 
    read ``a PHA''.
        b. In paragraph (b), revise the reference to ``Sec. 882.216 or 
    887.405'' to read ``Sec. 982.555 of this title''.
        22. Amend Sec. 792.103 as follows:
        a. Remove the definition of ``HA (Housing Agency)'';
        b. Add the definition of ``Public housing agency (PHA)'' in 
    alphabetical order as set forth below; and
        c. In the definition of ``Repayment agreement'', revise the 
    reference to ``an HA'' to read ``a PHA''.
    
    
    Sec. 792.103  Definitions.
    
    * * * * *
        Public housing agency (PHA). A public housing agency as defined in 
    Sec. 791.102.
    * * * * *
    
    
    Sec. 792.202  [Amended]
    
        23. In Sec. 792.202(a)(1) and (a)(2), revise the reference to 
    ``Sec. 882.216 or 887.405'' to read ``Sec. 982.555 of this title''.
    
    PART 982--SECTION 8 TENANT BASED ASSISTANCE: HOUSING CHOICE VOUCHER 
    PROGRAM
    
        24. Revise the heading of part 982 to read as set forth above.
        25. The authority citation for part 982 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437f and 3535(d).
    
    PART 982--[AMENDED]
    
        25a. In part 982, ``HA'' is removed and ``PHA'' is added in its 
    place wherever it appears, and ``an HA'' is removed and ``a PHA'' is 
    added in its place wherever it appears.
        26. Amend Sec. 982.1 as follows:
        a. Revise the section heading;
        b. Revise paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(2), and (a)(4);
        c. Amend paragraph (a)(3) by removing the reference to ``and is not 
    based on the actual rent of the leased unit'';
        d. Amend paragraph (b)(1) by removing the reference to 
    ``certificate or''; and
        e. Revise paragraph (b)(2).
        The revisions read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.1  Programs: Purpose and structure.
    
        (a) General description. (1) In the HUD Housing Choice Voucher 
    Program (Voucher Program) and the HUD certificate program, HUD pays 
    rental subsidies so eligible families can afford decent, safe and 
    sanitary housing. Both programs are generally administered by State or 
    local governmental entities called public housing agencies (PHAs). HUD 
    provides housing assistance funds to the PHA. HUD also provides funds 
    for PHA administration of the programs. PHAs are no longer allowed to 
    enter into contracts for assistance in the certificate program.
        (2) Families select and rent units that meet program housing 
    quality standards. If the PHA approves a family's unit and tenancy, the 
    PHA contracts with the owner to make rent subsidy payments on behalf of 
    the family. A PHA may not approve a tenancy unless the rents is 
    reasonable.
    * * * * *
        (4)(i) In the certificate program, the subsidy for most families is 
    the difference between the rent and 30 percent of adjusted monthly 
    income.
        (ii) In the voucher program, the subsidy is based on a local 
    ``payment standard'' that reflects the cost to lease a unit in the 
    local housing market. If the rent is less than the payment standard, 
    the family generally pays 30 percent of adjusted monthly income for 
    rent. If the rent is more than the payment standard, the family pays a 
    larger share of the rent.
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (2) To receive tenant-based assistance, the family selects a 
    suitable unit. After approving the tenancy, the PHA enters into a 
    contract to make rental subsidy payments to the owner to subsidize 
    occupancy by the family. The PHA contract with the owner only covers a 
    single unit and a specific assisted family. If the family moves out of 
    the leased unit, the contract with the owner terminates. The family may 
    move to another unit with continued assistance so long as the family is 
    complying with program requirements.
    
    
    Sec. 982.2  [Amended]
    
        27. In Sec. 982.2(a), remove the word ``rental'' in both places it 
    appears in the second sentence.
        28. Amend Sec. 982.4 as follows:
        a. Amend paragraph (a)(2) by removing the reference to ``Housing 
    agency (HA)'';
        b. In paragraph (a)(4) revise the reference to ``utility allowance, 
    and utility reimbursement'' to read ``utility allowance'';
        c. Amend paragraph (b) by removing the definitions of 
    ``Amortization payment'', ``Certificate'', ``Certificate or voucher 
    holder'', ``Certificate program'',
    
    [[Page 26641]]
    
    ``Contiguous MSA'', ``Contract authority'', ``Exception rent'', ``FMR/
    exception rent limit'', ``Lease addendum'', ``Over-FMR tenancy'', 
    ``Regular tenancy'', ``Set-up charges'', ``Utility hook-up charge'', 
    and ``Voucher program'';
        d. Amend paragraph (b) by revising the definitions of ``Payment 
    standard'', and ``Tenant rent'';
        e. Amend paragraph (b) by removing the reference to ``certificate 
    or'' from the definitions of the terms ``Receiving HA'' and 
    ``Suspension''; and
        f. Amend paragraph (b) by removing the phrase ``approval to lease a 
    unit'' in the definition of ``Suspension'' and adding in its place 
    ``approval of the tenancy''.
        g. Amend paragraph (b) by adding, in alphabetical order, the 
    definitions of the terms ``Merger date'', ``PHA plan'', ``Program'', 
    ``Program receipts'', ``Public housing agency (PHA)'', ``Residency 
    preference'', ``Residency preference area'', ``Tenant rent'', and 
    ``Voucher holder''.
    
    
    Sec. 982.4  Definitions.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        Merger date. August 12, 1999.
    * * * * *
        Payment standard. The maximum monthly assistance payment for a 
    family assisted in the voucher program (before deducting the total 
    tenant payment by the family).
        PHA plan. The annual plan and the 5-year plan as adopted by the PHA 
    and approved by HUD in accordance with part 903 of this chapter.
    * * * * *
        Program. The Section 8 tenant-based assistance program under this 
    part.
        Program receipts. HUD payments to the PHA under the consolidated 
    ACC, and any other amounts received by the PHA in connection with the 
    program.
        Public housing agency (PHA). PHA includes both:
        (1) Any State, county, municipality, or other governmental entity 
    or public body which is authorized to administer the program (or an 
    agency or instrumentality of such an entity), or
        (2) Any of the following:
        (i) A consortia of housing agencies, each of which meets the 
    qualifications in paragraph (1) of this definition, that HUD determines 
    has the capacity and capability to efficiently administer the program 
    (in which case, HUD may enter into a consolidated ACC with any legal 
    entity authorized to act as the legal representative of the consortia 
    members);
        (ii) Any other public or private non-profit entity that was 
    administering a Section 8 tenant-based assistance program pursuant to a 
    contract with the contract administrator of such program (HUD or a PHA) 
    on October 21, 1998; or
        (iii) For any area outside the jurisdiction of a PHA that is 
    administering a tenant-based program, or where HUD determines that such 
    PHA is not administering the program effectively, a private non-profit 
    entity or a governmental entity or public body that would otherwise 
    lack jurisdiction to administer the program in such area.
    * * * * *
        Residency preference. A PHA preference for admission of families 
    that reside anywhere in a specified area, including families with a 
    member who works or has been hired to work in the area (``residency 
    preference area'').
        Residency preference area. The specified area where families must 
    reside to qualify for a residency preference.
    * * * * *
        Tenant rent. For a tenancy in the certificate program: The total 
    tenant payment minus any utility allowance.
    * * * * *
        Voucher holder. A family holding a voucher with an unexpired term 
    (search time).
    * * * * *
        29. Revise Sec. 982.51(a) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.51  PHA authority to administer program.
    
        (a) The PHA must have authority to administer the program. The PHA 
    must provide evidence, satisfactory to HUD, of its status as a PHA, of 
    its authority to administer the program, and of the PHA jurisdiction.
    * * * * *
        30. Amend Sec. 982.53 by revising paragraphs (b) and (c) and adding 
    paragraph (d) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.53  Equal opportunity requirements.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Civil rights certification. The PHA must submit a signed 
    certification to HUD that:
        (1) The PHA will administer the program in conformity with the Fair 
    Housing Act, Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, section 504 of 
    the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, and Title II of the Americans with 
    Disabilities Act.
        (2) The PHA will affirmatively further fair housing in the 
    administration of the program.
        (c) Obligation to affirmatively further fair housing. The PHA shall 
    be considered in compliance with the obligation to affirmatively 
    further fair housing if the PHA examines its programs or proposed 
    programs, identifies any impediments to fair housing choice within 
    those programs, addresses those impediments in a reasonable fashion in 
    view of the resources available, works with the local jurisdiction to 
    implement any of the local government's initiatives to affirmatively 
    further fair housing that require the PHA's involvement, and maintains 
    records reflecting these analyses and actions.
        (d) State law. Nothing in part 982 is intended to pre-empt 
    operation of State laws that prohibit discrimination against a Section 
    8 voucher-holder because of status as a Section 8 voucher-holder. 
    However, such State laws shall not change or affect any requirement of 
    this part, or any other HUD requirements for administration or 
    operation of the program.
        31. Amend Sec. 982.54 as follows:
        a. Revise paragraphs (d)(1), (d)(2), (d)(14) and (d)(15);
        b. Remove paragraph (d)(16);
        c. Redesignate paragraphs (d)(17) through (d)(22) as paragraphs 
    (d)(16) through (d)(21) respectively; and
        d. Add new paragraph (d)(27).
        The revisions and addition read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.54  Administrative plan.
    
    * * * * *
        (d) * * *
        (1) Selection and admission of applicants from the PHA waiting 
    list, including any PHA admission preferences, procedures for removing 
    applicant names from the waiting list, and procedures for closing and 
    reopening the PHA waiting list;
        (2) Issuing or denying vouchers, including PHA policy governing the 
    voucher term and any extensions or suspensions of the voucher term. 
    ``Suspension'' means stopping the clock on the term of a family's 
    voucher after the family submits a request for approval of the tenancy. 
    If the PHA decides to allow extensions or suspensions of the voucher 
    term, the PHA administrative plan must describe how the PHA determines 
    whether to grant extensions or suspensions, and how the PHA determines 
    the length of any extension or suspension;
    * * * * *
        (14) The process for establishing and revising voucher payment 
    standards;
        (15) The method of determining that rent to owner is a reasonable 
    rent (initially and during the term of a HAP contract);
    * * * * *
    
    [[Page 26642]]
    
        (22) Procedural guidelines and performance standards for conducting 
    required HQS inspections.
        32. In Sec. 982.101, revise paragraph (a) and paragraph (b)(2)(i) 
    to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.101  Allocation of funding.
    
        (a) Allocation of funding. HUD allocates available budget authority 
    for the tenant-based assistance program to HUD field offices.
        (b) * * *
        (2) * * *
        (i) Funding retained in a headquarters reserve for purposes 
    specified by law;
    * * * * *
        33. Amend Sec. 982.103 by revising paragraph (a) and adding 
    paragraph (c) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.103  HUD review of application.
    
        (a) Competitive funding under NOFA. For competitive funding under a 
    NOFA, HUD must evaluate an application on the basis of the selection 
    criteria stated in the NOFA, and must consider the PHA's capacity and 
    capability to administer the program.
    * * * * *
        (c) PHA disqualification. HUD will not approve any PHA funding 
    application (including an application for competitive funding under a 
    NOFA) if HUD determines that the PHA is disbarred or otherwise 
    disqualified from providing assistance under the program.
        34. Amend Sec. 982.151 as follows:
        a. Amend paragraph (a)(1) by removing the reference to ``the 
    maximum annual payment by HUD, and'';
        b. In paragraph (a)(2), revise the reference to ``certificate 
    program and voucher program'' to read ``tenant-based assistance 
    program''; and
        c. Revise paragraph (b) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.151  Annual contributions contract.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Budget authority. (1) Budget authority is the maximum amount 
    that may be paid by HUD to a PHA over the ACC term of a funding 
    increment. Before adding a funding increment to the consolidated ACC 
    for a PHA program, HUD reserves budget authority from amounts 
    authorized and appropriated by the Congress for the program.
        (2) For each funding increment, the ACC specifies the term over 
    which HUD will make payments for the PHA program, and the amount of 
    available budget authority for each funding increment. The amount to be 
    paid to the PHA during each PHA fiscal year (including payment from the 
    ACC reserve account described in Sec. 982.154) must be approved by HUD.
        35. Amend Sec. 982.152 by revising paragraphs (a)(1), (b)(1) and 
    (c) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.152  Administrative fee.
    
        (a) Purposes of administrative fee. (1) HUD may approve 
    administrative fees to the PHA for any of the following purposes:
        (i) Ongoing administrative fee;
        (ii) Costs to help families who experience difficulty finding or 
    renting appropriate housing under the program;
        (iii) The following types of extraordinary costs approved by HUD:
        (A) Costs to cover necessary additional expenses incurred by the 
    PHA to provide reasonable accommodation for persons with disabilities 
    in accordance with part 8 of this title (e.g., additional counselling 
    costs), where the PHA is unable to cover such additional expenses from 
    ongoing administrative fee income or the PHA administrative fee 
    reserve;
        (B) Costs of audit by an independent public accountant;
        (C) Other extraordinary costs determined necessary by HUD 
    Headquarters;
        (iv) Preliminary fee (in accordance with paragraph (c) of this 
    section);
        (v) Costs to coordinate supportive services for families 
    participating in the family self-sufficiency (FSS) program.
    * * * * *
        (b) Ongoing administrative fee. (1) The PHA ongoing administrative 
    fee is paid for each program unit under HAP contract on the first day 
    of the month. The amount of the ongoing fee is determined by HUD in 
    accordance with Section 8(q)(1) of the 1937 Act (42 U.S.C. 
    1437f(q)(1)).
    * * * * *
        (c) Preliminary fee. (1) If the PHA was not administering a program 
    of Section 8 tenant-based assistance prior to the merger date, HUD will 
    pay a one-time fee in the amount of $500 in the first year the PHA 
    administers a program. The fee is paid for each new unit added to the 
    PHA program by the initial funding increment under the consolidated 
    ACC.
        (2) The preliminary fee is used to cover expenses the PHA incurs to 
    help families who inquire about or apply for the program, and to lease 
    up new program units.
    * * * * *
        36. Revise Sec. 982.154 to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.154  ACC reserve account.
    
        (a) HUD may establish and maintain an unfunded reserve account for 
    the PHA program from available budget authority under the consolidated 
    ACC. This reserve is called the ``ACC reserve account'' (formerly 
    ``project reserve''). There is a single ACC reserve account for the PHA 
    program.
        (b) The amount in the ACC reserve account is determined by HUD. HUD 
    may approve payments for the PHA program, in accordance with the PHA's 
    HUD-approved budget, from available amounts in the ACC reserve account.
        37. Amend Sec. 982.155 by revising the introductory text of 
    paragraph (a) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.155  Administrative fee reserve.
    
        (a) The PHA must maintain an administrative fee reserve (formerly 
    ``operating reserve'') for the program. There is a single 
    administrative fee reserve for the PHA program. The PHA must credit to 
    the administrative fee reserve the total of:
    * * * * *
        38. Amend Sec. 982.157 as follows:
        a. Revise paragraph (b)(1) introductory text as set forth below; 
    and
        b. Add paragraph (c).
    
    
    Sec. 982.157  Budget and expenditures.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) PHA use of program receipts. (1) Program receipts must be used 
    in accordance with the PHA's HUD-approved budget. Such program receipts 
    may only be used for:
    * * * * *
        (c) Intellectual property rights. Program receipts may not be used 
    to indemnify contractors or subcontractors of the PHA against costs 
    associated with any judgment of infringement of intellectual property 
    rights.
        39. Revise Sec. 982.162(a)(3) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.162  Use of HUD-required contracts and other forms.
    
        (a) * * *
        (3) The tenancy addendum required by HUD (which is included both in 
    the HAP contract and in the lease between the owner and the tenant).
    * * * * *
        40. Amend Sec. 982.201 as follows:
        a. In paragraph (a), revise the reference to ``a program'' to read 
    ``the program'';
        b. Revise paragraphs (b) and (f)(2) as set forth below; and
        c. Remove the reference to ``certificate or'' in paragraphs (d)(1), 
    (d)(2) and (e).
    
    
    Sec. 982.201  Eligibility.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Income. (1) Income-eligibility. To be income-eligible, the 
    applicant must
    
    [[Page 26643]]
    
    be a family in any of the following categories:
        (i) A ``very low income'' family;
        (ii) A low-income family that is ``continuously assisted'' under 
    the 1937 Housing Act;
        (iii) A low-income family that meets additional eligibility 
    criteria specified in the PHA administrative plan. Such additional PHA 
    criteria must be consistent with the PHA plan and with the consolidated 
    plans for local governments in the PHA jurisdiction;
        (iv) A low-income family that qualifies for voucher assistance as a 
    non-purchasing family residing in a HOPE 1 (HOPE for public housing 
    homeownership) or HOPE 2 (HOPE for homeownership of multifamily units) 
    project. (Section 8(o)(4)(D) of the 1937 Act (42 U.S.C. 
    1437f(o)(4)(D));
        (v) A low-income or moderate-income family that is displaced as a 
    result of the prepayment of the mortgage or voluntary termination of an 
    insurance contract on eligible low-income housing as defined in 
    Sec. 248.101 of this title;
        (vi) A low-income family that qualifies for voucher assistance as a 
    non-purchasing family residing in a project subject to a resident 
    homeownership program under Sec. 248.173 of this title.
        (2) Income-targeting. (i) Not less than 75 percent of the families 
    admitted to a PHA's tenant-based voucher program during the PHA fiscal 
    year shall be targeted to families whose annual income does not exceed 
    the following amounts as determined by HUD:
        (A) 30 percent of the area median income, with adjustments for 
    smaller and larger families; or
        (B) A higher or lower percent of the area median income, if HUD 
    determines that a higher or lower percent is necessary because of 
    unusually high or low family incomes.
        (ii) Conversion of assistance for a participant in the PHA 
    certificate program to assistance in the PHA voucher program does not 
    count as an ``admission,'' and is not subject to targeting under 
    paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section.
        (iii) Admission of families as described in paragraphs (b)(1)(ii) 
    or (b)(1)(v) of this section is not subject to targeting under 
    paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section.
        (iv) If two or more PHAs that administer section 8 tenant-based 
    assistance have an identical jurisdiction, such PHAs shall be treated 
    as a single PHA for purposes of targeting under paragraph (b)(2)(i) of 
    this section. In such a case, the PHAs shall cooperate to assure that 
    aggregate admissions by such PHAs comply with the targeting 
    requirement. If such PHAs do not have a single fiscal year, HUD will 
    determine which PHA's fiscal year is used for this purpose.
        (3) The annual income (gross income) of an applicant family is used 
    both for determination of income-eligibility under paragraph (b)(1) of 
    this section, and for targeting under paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this 
    section.
        (4) The applicable income limit for issuance of a voucher when a 
    family is selected for the program is the highest income limit (for the 
    family unit size) for areas in the PHA jurisdiction. The applicable 
    income limit for admission to the program is the income limit for the 
    area where the family is initially assisted in the program. The family 
    may only use the voucher to rent a unit in an area where the family is 
    income eligible at admission to the program.
    * * * * *
        (f) * * *
        (2) For description of the grounds for denying assistance because 
    of action or inaction by the applicant, see Sec. 982.552(b) and (c) 
    (requirement and authority to deny admission) and Sec. 982.553(a) 
    (crime by family members).
        41. Amend Sec. 982.202 as follows:
        a. Remove paragraph (b)(1);
        b. Redesignate paragraphs (b)(2), (b)(3), and (b)(4) as paragraphs 
    (b)(1), (b)(2), and (b)(3), respectively; and
        c. Revise the introductory text of the newly designated paragraph 
    (b)(3) as set forth below; and
        d. Revise paragraph (d) as set forth below.
    
    
    Sec. 982.202  How applicants are selected: General requirements.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (3) Family characteristics. The PHA preference system may provide a 
    preference for admission of families with certain characteristics from 
    the PHA waiting list. However, admission to the program may not be 
    based on:
    * * * * *
        (d) Admission policy. 
        The PHA must admit applicants for participation in accordance with 
    HUD regulations and other requirements, and with PHA policies stated in 
    the PHA administrative plan and the PHA plan. The PHA admission policy 
    must state the system of admission preferences that the PHA uses to 
    select applicants from the waiting list, including any residency 
    preference or other local preference.
    
    
    Sec. 982.20  [Amended]
    
        42. In Sec. 982.203(b)(1), remove the words ``or Indian''.
        43. In Sec. 982.204, revise paragraph (b)(4), amend paragraph 
    (b)(5) to remove the phrase ``ranking preference or'' and add a new 
    paragraph (f) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.204  Waiting list: Administration of waiting list.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (4) Qualification for any local preference;
    * * * * *
        (f) Number of waiting lists. A PHA must use a single waiting list 
    for admission to its Section 8 tenant-based assistance program. 
    However, the PHA may use a separate single waiting list for such 
    admissions for a county or municipality.
    
    
    Sec. 982.205  [Amended]
    
        44. Amend Sec. 982.205 as follows:
        a. Remove paragraph (a);
        b. Redesignate paragraphs (b) and (c) as paragraphs (a) and (b), 
    respectively;
        c. In newly designated paragraph (a)(2), revise all references to 
    ``project-based certificate program'' to read ``project-based voucher 
    program'', and remove all references to ``or Indian'';
        d. In newly designated paragraph (b)(1), remove the reference to 
    ``or Indian''; and
        e. In newly designated paragraph (b)(3), revise the reference to 
    ``paragraph (c)(2)'' to read ``paragraph (b)(2)'', and remove the 
    reference to ``both the certificate program and''.
        45. Amend Sec. 982.206 as follows:
        a. Revise paragraph (b)(2) as set forth below;
        b. Remove paragraph (c)(2); and
        c. Redesignate paragraph (c)(1) as paragraph (c).
    
    
    Sec. 982.206  Waiting list: Opening and closing; Public notice.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (2) If the waiting list is open, the PHA must accept applications 
    from families for whom the list is open unless there is good cause for 
    not accepting the application (such as denial of assistance because of 
    action or inaction by members of the family) for the grounds stated in 
    Secs. 982.552 and 982.553.
    * * * * *
        46. Revise Sec. 982.207 to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.207  Waiting list: Local preferences in admission to program.
    
        (a) Establishment of PHA local preferences. (1) The PHA may 
    establish a system of local preferences for selection of families 
    admitted to the program. PHA selection preferences must be described in 
    the PHA administrative plan. The system of local
    
    [[Page 26644]]
    
    preferences must be consistent with the PHA plan (see part 903 of this 
    title), and with the consolidated plans for local governments in the 
    PHA jurisdiction.
        (2) The PHA system of local preferences must be based on local 
    housing needs and priorities, as determined by the PHA. In determining 
    such needs and priorities, the PHA shall use generally accepted data 
    sources. The PHA shall consider public comment on the proposed public 
    housing agency plan (as received pursuant to Sec. 903.17 of this 
    chapter) and on the consolidated plan for the relevant jurisdiction (as 
    received pursuant to part 91 of this title).
        (3) The PHA may limit the number of applicants that may qualify for 
    any local preference.
        (b) Residency preferences. (1) If approved by HUD, the PHA may 
    adopt a residency preference that establishes a county or municipality 
    as a residency preference area. A PHA may not adopt a residency 
    preference for an area smaller than a county or municipality.
        (2) A residency preference must apply to families with a member who 
    works or who has been hired to work anywhere in a residency preference 
    area. In applying the residency preference, such families must be 
    treated like families that reside in the residency preference area.
        (3) A residency preference may not be based on how long the 
    applicant has resided in or worked in the PHA jurisdiction or residency 
    preference area.
        (c) Selection among families with preference. The PHA system of 
    preferences may use either of the following to select among applicants 
    on the waiting list with the same preference status:
        (1) Date and time of application; or
        (2) A drawing or other random choice technique.
        (d) Preference for person with disabilities. The PHA may give a 
    preference for admission of families that include a person with 
    disabilities. However, the PHA may not give a preference for admission 
    of persons with a specific disability.
        (e) Verification of selection method. The method for selecting 
    applicants from a preference category must leave a clear audit trail 
    that can be used to verify that each applicant has been selected in 
    accordance with the method specified in the administrative plan.
        47. Amend Sec. 982.301 as follows:
        a. In paragraph (b)(1), remove the reference to ``certificate or''; 
    and
        b. Revise paragraphs (b)(2), (b)(5) and (b)(6) as set forth below.
    
    
    Sec. 982.301  Information when family is selected.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (2) How the PHA determines the amount of the housing assistance 
    payment for a family, including:
        (i) How the PHA determines the payment standard for a family; and
        (ii) How the PHA determines the total tenant payment for a family.
    * * * * *
        (5) The HUD-required ``tenancy addendum'' that must be included in 
    the lease;
        (6) The form that the family uses to request PHA approval of the 
    assisted tenancy, and an explanation of how to request such approval;
    * * * * *
        48. Revise Sec. 982.302 to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.302  Issuance of voucher; Requesting PHA approval of assisted 
    tenancy.
    
        (a) When a family is selected, or when a participant family wants 
    to move to another unit, the PHA issues a voucher to the family. The 
    family may search for a unit.
        (b) If the family finds a unit, and the owner is willing to lease 
    the unit under the program, the family may request PHA approval of the 
    tenancy. The PHA has the discretion whether to permit the family to 
    submit more than one request at a time.
        (c) The family must submit to the PHA a request for approval of the 
    tenancy and a copy of the lease, including the HUD-prescribed tenancy 
    addendum. The request must be submitted during the term of the voucher.
        (d) The PHA specifies the procedure for requesting approval of the 
    tenancy. The family must submit the request for approval of the tenancy 
    in the form and manner required by the PHA.
    
    
    Sec. 982.303  [Amended]
    
        49. Amend Sec. 982.303 as follows:
        a. Revise the section heading to read ``Term of voucher'';
        b. Remove all references to ``certificate or''; and
        c. In paragraph (c), revise both references to ``request for lease 
    approval'' to read ``request for approval of the tenancy''.
        50. Amend Sec. 982.305 as follows:
        a. Revise the section heading to read ``PHA approval of assisted 
    tenancy'';
        b. In the introductory text of paragraph (a), revise the reference 
    to ``to lease a dwelling unit'' to read ``of the assisted tenancy'';
        c. Remove paragraph (a)(5);
        d. Revise paragraphs (a)(3), (a)(4) and (b) as set forth below;
        e. In paragraphs (d) and (e), revise the references to ``to lease a 
    unit'' to read ``of the assisted tenancy''.
    
    
    Sec. 982.305  PHA approval of assisted tenancy.
    
        (a) * * *
        (3) The lease includes the tenancy addendum; and
        (4) The rent to owner is reasonable.
        (b) Actions before lease term. (1) All of the following must always 
    be completed before the beginning of the initial term of the lease for 
    a unit:
        (i) The PHA has inspected the unit and has determined that the unit 
    satisfies the HQS;
        (ii) The landlord and the tenant have executed the lease (including 
    the HUD-prescribed tenancy addendum); and
        (iii) The PHA has approved leasing of the unit in accordance with 
    program requirements.
        (2)(i) The PHA must inspect the unit, determine whether the unit 
    satisfies the HQS, and notify the family and owner of the 
    determination:
        (A) In the case of a PHA with up to 1250 budgeted units in its 
    tenant-based program, within fifteen days after the family and the 
    owner submit a request for approval of the tenancy.
        (B) In the case of a PHA with more than 1250 budgeted units in its 
    tenant-based program, within a reasonable time after the family submits 
    a request for approval of the tenancy. To the extent practicable, such 
    inspection and determination must be completed within fifteen days 
    after the family and the owner submit a request for approval of the 
    tenancy.
        (ii) The fifteen day clock (under paragraph (b)(2)(i)(A) or 
    paragraph (b)(2)(i)(B) of this section) is suspended during any period 
    when the unit is not available for inspection.
    * * * * *
        51. Amend Sec. 982.306 as follows:
        a. In paragraph (a) and the introductory text of paragraph (b), 
    revise the references to ``a unit'' to read ``an assisted tenancy'';
        b. In the introductory text of paragraph (c), revise the reference 
    to ``to lease a unit from an owner'' to read ``of an assisted 
    tenancy'';
        c. Revise paragraph (c)(3) as set forth below;
        d. Redesignate paragraphs (c)(5) and (c)(6) as paragraphs (c)(6) 
    and (c)(7), respectively; and
        e. Add new paragraph (c)(5) as set forth below.
    
    
    Sec. 982.306  PHA disapproval of owner.
    
    * * * * *
    
    [[Page 26645]]
    
        (c) * * *
        (3) The owner has engaged in any drug-related criminal activity or 
    any violent criminal activity;
    * * * * *
        (5) The owner has a history or practice of failing to terminate 
    tenancy of tenants of units assisted under Section 8 or any other 
    federally assisted housing program for activity by the tenant, any 
    member of the household, a guest or another person under the control of 
    any member of the household that:
        (i) Threatens the right to peaceful enjoyment of the premises by 
    other residents;
        (ii) Threatens the health or safety of other residents, of 
    employees of the PHA, or of owner employees or other persons engaged in 
    management of the housing;
        (iii) Threatens the health or safety of, or the right to peaceful 
    enjoyment of their residences, by persons residing in the immediate 
    vicinity of the premises; or
        (iv) Is drug-related criminal activity or violent criminal 
    activity; or
    * * * * *
        52. In Sec. 982.307 revise the section heading and paragraph (a) to 
    read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.307  Tenant screening.
    
        (a) PHA option and owner responsibility. (1) The PHA may opt to 
    screen family behavior or suitability for tenancy. However, the PHA has 
    no liability or responsibility to the owner or other persons for the 
    family's behavior or the family's conduct in tenancy.
        (2) The owner is responsible for screening and selection of the 
    family to occupy the owner's unit. At or before PHA approval of the 
    tenancy, the PHA must inform the owner that screening and selection for 
    tenancy is the responsibility of the owner.
        (3) The owner is responsible for screening of families on the basis 
    of their tenancy histories. An owner may consider a family's background 
    with respect to such factors as:
        (i) Payment of rent and utility bills;
        (ii) Caring for a unit and premises;
        (iii) Respecting the rights of other residents to the peaceful 
    enjoyment of their housing;
        (iv) Drug-related criminal activity or other criminal activity that 
    is a threat to the health, safety or property of others; and
        (v) Compliance with other essential conditions of tenancy.
    * * * * *
        53. Revise Sec. 982.308 to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.308  Lease and tenancy.
    
        (a) Tenant's legal capacity to enter lease. The tenant must have 
    legal capacity to enter a lease under State and local law.
        (b) Owner lease. The tenant and owner must enter a lease for the 
    unit. The HAP contract shall contain owner's certification that:
        (1) The lease between the tenant and the owner is in a standard 
    form used in the locality by the owner and that is generally used for 
    other unassisted tenants in the premises.
        (2) The terms and conditions of the lease are consistent with State 
    and local law.
        (c) State and local law. The PHA may review the lease to determine 
    if the lease complies with State and local law. The PHA may decline to 
    approve the tenancy if the PHA determines that the lease does not 
    comply with State or local law.
        (d) Utilities and appliances. The lease must specify what utilities 
    and appliances are to be supplied by the owner, and what utilities and 
    appliances are to be supplied by the family.
        (e) Reasonable rent. The rent to owner must be reasonable (see 
    Sec. 982.507).
        (f) Tenancy addendum. The HAP contract form required by HUD shall 
    include an addendum (the ``tenancy addendum''), that sets forth tenancy 
    requirements for the program (in accordance with Secs. 982.308, 982.309 
    and 982.310). All provisions of the HUD-required tenancy addendum must 
    be added word-for-word to the owner's standard form lease that is used 
    by the owner for unassisted tenants. The tenant shall have the right to 
    enforce the tenancy addendum against the owner, and the terms of the 
    tenancy addendum shall prevail over any other provisions of the lease.
        54. Revise Sec. 982.309 to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.309  Term of assisted tenancy.
    
        (a) Initial term of lease. (1) Except as provided in paragraph 
    (a)(2) of this section, the initial lease term must be for at least one 
    year.
        (2) The PHA may approve a shorter initial lease term if the PHA 
    determines that:
        (i) Such shorter term would improve housing opportunities for the 
    tenant; and
        (ii) Such shorter term is the prevailing local market practice.
        (3) During the initial term of the lease, the owner may not raise 
    the rent to owner.
        (4) The PHA may execute the HAP contract even if there is less than 
    one year remaining from the beginning of the initial lease term to the 
    end of the last expiring funding increment under the consolidated ACC.
        (b) Term of HAP contract. (1) The term of the HAP contract begins 
    on the first day of the lease term and ends on the last day of the 
    lease term.
        (2) The HAP contract terminates if any of the following occurs:
        (i) The lease is terminated by the owner or the tenant;
        (ii) The PHA terminates the HAP contract; or
        (iii) The PHA terminates assistance for the family.
        (c) Family responsibility. (1) If the family terminates the lease 
    on notice to the owner, the family must give the PHA a copy of the 
    notice of termination at the same time. Failure to do this is a breach 
    of family obligations under the program.
        (2) The family must notify the PHA and the owner before the family 
    moves out of the unit. Failure to do this is a breach of family 
    obligations under the program.
        55. Amend Sec. 982.310 as follows:
        a. Revise paragraphs (a)(1) and (d)(1)(iv) as set forth below;
        b. In paragraph (d)(2), revise the reference to ``During the first 
    year of the lease term'' to read ``During the initial lease term,''; 
    and
        c. Remove paragraph (e)(3).
    
    
    Sec. 982.310  Owner termination of tenancy.
    
        (a) * * *
        (1) Serious violation (including but not limited to failure to pay 
    rent or other amounts due under the lease) or repeated violation of the 
    terms and conditions of the lease;
    * * * * *
        (d) * * *
        (1) * * *
        (iv) A business or economic reason for termination of the tenancy 
    (such as sale of the property, renovation of the unit, or desire to 
    lease the unit at a higher rental).
    * * * * *
        56. Amend Sec. 982.352 by revising paragraph (b)(1) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.352  Eligible housing.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) PHA-owned housing. (1) A unit that is owned by the PHA that 
    administers the assistance under the consolidated ACC (including a unit 
    owned by an entity substantially controlled by the PHA) may only be 
    assisted under the tenant-based program if all the following conditions 
    are satisfied:
        (i) The PHA must inform the family, both orally and in writing, 
    that the
    
    [[Page 26646]]
    
    family has the right to select any eligible unit available for lease, 
    and a PHA-owned unit is freely selected by the family, without PHA 
    pressure or steering.
        (ii) The unit is not ineligible housing.
        (iii) During assisted occupancy, the family may not benefit from 
    any form of housing subsidy that is prohibited under paragraph (c) of 
    this section.
        (iv)(A) The PHA must obtain the services of an independent entity 
    to perform the following PHA functions as required under the program 
    rule:
        (1) To determine rent reasonableness in accordance with 
    Sec. 982.507. The independent agency shall communicate the rent 
    reasonableness determination to the family and the PHA.
        (2) To assist the family negotiate the rent to owner in accordance 
    with Sec. 982.506.
        (3) To inspect the unit for compliance with the HQS in accordance 
    with Sec. 982.305(a) and Sec. 982.405 (except that Sec. 982.405(e) is 
    not applicable). The independent agency shall communicate the results 
    of each such inspection to the family and the PHA.
        (B) The independent agency used to perform these functions must be 
    approved by HUD. The independent agency may be the unit of general 
    local government for the PHA jurisdiction (unless the PHA is itself the 
    unit of general local government or an agency of such government), or 
    may be another HUD-approved independent agency.
        (C) The PHA may compensate the independent agency from PHA ongoing 
    administrative fee income for the services performed by the independent 
    agency. The PHA may not use other program receipts to compensate the 
    independent agency for such services. The PHA and the independent 
    agency may not charge the family any fee or charge for the services 
    provided by the independent agency.
    * * * * *
        57. Amend Sec. 982.353 as follows:
        a. Revise paragraphs (b), (c)(2), and (d) as set forth below; and
        b. In paragraph (f), remove the references to ``contract rent 
    (certificate program) or'' and ``(voucher program)''.
    
    
    Sec. 982.353  Where family can lease a unit with tenant-based 
    assistance.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Portability: Assistance outside the initial PHA jurisdiction. 
    Subject to paragraph (c) of this section, and to Sec. 982.552 and 
    Sec. 982.553, a voucher-holder or participant family has the right to 
    receive tenant-based voucher assistance in accordance with requirements 
    of this part to lease a unit outside the initial PHA jurisdiction, 
    anywhere in the United States, in the jurisdiction of a PHA with a 
    tenant-based program under this part. The initial PHA must not provide 
    such portable assistance for a participant if the family has moved out 
    of its assisted unit in violation of the lease.
    * * * * *
        (c) * * *
        (2) The following apply during the 12 month period from the time 
    when a family described in paragraph (c)(1) of this section is admitted 
    to the program:
        (i) The family may lease a unit anywhere in the jurisdiction of the 
    initial PHA;
        (ii) The family does not have any right to portability;
        (iii) The initial PHA may choose to allow portability during this 
    period.
    * * * * *
        (d) Income eligibility. (1) For admission to the program, a family 
    must be income eligible in the area where the family initially leases a 
    unit with assistance under the program.
        (2) If a portable family is a participant in the initial PHA 
    Section 8 tenant-based program (either the PHA voucher program or the 
    PHA certificate program), income eligibility is not redetermined when 
    the family moves to the receiving PHA program under portability 
    procedures.
        (3) Except as provided in paragraph (d)(2) of this section, a 
    portable family must be income eligible for admission to the voucher 
    program in the area where the family leases a unit under portability 
    procedures.
    * * * * *
    
    
    Sec. 982.354  [Removed]
    
        58. Remove Sec. 982.354.
        59. Amend Sec. 982.355 as follows:
        a. Revise paragraphs (b), (c)(1) and (c)(6) as set forth below;
        b. Amend paragraph (c)(4) by removing the reference to ``or 
    certificate'',
        c. In paragraph (c)(8), revise the reference to ``request for lease 
    approval'' to read ``request for approval of the tenancy'' and remove 
    the reference to ``certificate or'';
        d. In paragraph (d)(1), remove the two references to ``certificate 
    or''; and
        e. In paragraph (d)(6), revise the word ``programs'' to read 
    ``program''.
    
    
    Sec. 982.355  Portability: Administration by receiving PHA.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) In the conditions described in paragraph (a) of this section, a 
    PHA with jurisdiction in the area where the family wants to lease a 
    unit must issue a voucher to the family. If there is more than one such 
    PHA, the initial PHA may choose the receiving PHA.
        (c) Portability procedures. (1) The receiving PHA does not 
    redetermine elibilibility for a portable family that was already 
    receiving assistance in the initial PHA Section 8 tenant-based program 
    (either the PHA voucher program or certificate program). However, for a 
    portable family that was not already receiving assistance in the PHA 
    tenant-based program, the initial PHA must determine whether the family 
    is eligible for admission to the receiving PHA voucher program.
    * * * * *
        (6) The receiving PHA must issue a voucher to the family. The term 
    of the receiving PHA voucher may not expire before the expiration date 
    of any initial PHA voucher. The receiving PHA must determine whether to 
    extend the voucher term. The family must submit a request for approval 
    of the tenancy to the receiving PHA during the term of the receiving 
    PHA voucher.
    * * * * *
        60. Revise Sec. 982.401(a)(4) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.401  Housing quality standards (HQS).
    
        (a) * * *
        (4)(i) In addition to meeting HQS performance requirements, the 
    housing must meet the acceptability criteria stated in this section, 
    unless variations are approved by HUD.
        (ii) HUD may approve acceptability criteria variations for the 
    following purposes:
        (A) Variations which apply standards in local housing codes or 
    other codes adopted by the PHA; or
        (B) Variations because of local climatic or geographic conditions.
        (iii) Acceptability criteria variations may only be approved by HUD 
    pursuant to paragraph (a)(4)(ii) of this section if such variations 
    either:
        (A) Meet or exceed the acceptability criteria; or
        (B) Significantly expand affordable housing opportunities for 
    families assisted under the program.
        (iv) HUD will not approve any acceptability criteria variation if 
    HUD believes that such variation is likely to adversely affect the 
    health or safety of participant families, or severely restrict housing 
    choice.
    * * * * *
        61. Amend Sec. 982.402 as follows:
        a. Amend paragraph (a)(3) by removing the references to 
    ``certificate or'' and ``or certificate'';
        b. Revise paragraph (c) to read as follows:
    
    [[Page 26647]]
    
    Sec. 982.402  Subsidy standards.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) Effect of family unit size-maximum subsidy in voucher program. 
    The family unit size as determined for a family under the PHA subsidy 
    standard is used to determine the maximum rent subsidy for a family 
    assisted in the voucher program. For a voucher tenancy, the PHA 
    establishes payment standards by number of bedrooms. The payment 
    standard for a family shall be the lower of:
        (1) The payment standard amount for the family unit size; or
        (2) The payment standard amount for the unit size of the unit 
    rented by the family.
    * * * * *
        62. Amend Sec. 982.403 as follows:
        a. Revise the section heading to read ``Terminating HAP contract 
    when unit is too small'';
        b. Remove paragraph (a)(1);
        c. Redesignate paragraphs (a)(2) and (a)(3) as paragraphs (a)(1) 
    and (a)(2), respectively;
        d. Amend redesignated paragraph (a)(1) by removing the reference to 
    ``certificate or'';
        e. Amend paragraph (b)(2) by replacing the word ``certificate'' 
    with ``voucher''.
        f. Amend paragraph (b)(4) by removing the phrase ``within the FMR/
    exception rent limit''; and
        g. Revise the introductory text of redesignated paragraph (c) as 
    set forth below.
    
    
    Sec. 982.403  Terminating HAP contract when unit is too small.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) Termination. When the PHA terminates the HAP contract under 
    paragraph (a) of this section:
    * * * * *
        63. Amend Sec. 982.405 as follows:
        a. Revise the section heading and paragraph (a) as set forth below; 
    and
        b. Add paragraph (f) as set forth below.
    
    
    Sec. 982.405  PHA initial and periodic unit inspection.
    
        (a) The PHA must inspect the unit leased to a family prior to the 
    initial term of the lease, at least annually during assisted occupancy, 
    and at other times as needed, to determine if the unit meets the HQS. 
    (See Sec. 982.305(b)(2) concerning timing of initial inspection by the 
    PHA.)
    * * * * *
        (f) The PHA must adopt procedural guidelines and performance 
    standards for conducting required HQS inspections. The PHA guidelines 
    and standards must conform with practices utilized in the private 
    housing market, and facilitate efficient administration of assistance 
    under the program. The PHA administrative plan shall state the PHA 
    guidelines and standards for conducting HQS inspections.
        64. Revise Sec. 982.451(b)(5) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.451  Housing assistance payments contract.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (5)(i) The PHA must pay the housing assistance payment promptly 
    when due to the owner in accordance with the HAP contract.
        (ii) The HAP contract shall provide for penalties against the PHA 
    for late payment of housing assistance payments due to the owner under 
    the contract, where such penalties are in accordance with generally 
    accepted practices and law, as applicable in the local housing market, 
    governing penalties for late payment of rent by a tenant. However, the 
    PHA shall not be obligated to pay any late payment penalty if HUD 
    determines that late payment by the PHA is due to factors beyond the 
    PHA's control. The PHA may add HAP contract provisions which define 
    when the HAP payment by the PHA is deemed received by the owner (e.g. 
    upon mailing by the PHA or actual receipt by the owner).
        (iii) The PHA may only use the following sources to pay a late 
    payment penalty from program receipts under the consolidated ACC: 
    administrative fee income for the program; or the administrative fee 
    reserve for the program. The PHA may not use other program receipts for 
    this purpose.
    
    
    Sec. 982.452  [Amended]
    
        65. Amend Sec. 982.452(b)(1) by removing the reference to 
    ``certificate-holder or''.
    
    
    Sec. 982.453  [Amended]
    
        66. In Sec. 982.453(a)(5), revise the reference to ``drug-
    trafficking'' to read ``drug-related criminal activity''.
    
    
    Sec. 982.454  [Amended]
    
        67. Amend Sec. 982.454 by removing the last sentence.
        68. Revise Sec. 982.455 to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.455  Automatic termination of HAP contract.
    
        The HAP contract terminates automatically 180 calendar days after 
    the last housing assistance payment to the owner.
        69. Revise Sec. 982.456(b) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.456  Third parties.
    
    * * * * *
        (b)(1) The family is not a party to or third party beneficiary of 
    the HAP contract. Except as provided in paragraph (b)(2) of this 
    section, the family may not exercise any right or remedy against the 
    owner under the HAP contract.
        (2) The tenant may exercise any right or remedy against the owner 
    under the lease between the tenant and the owner, including enforcement 
    of the owner's obligations under the tenancy addendum (which is 
    included both in the HAP contract between the PHA and the owner; and in 
    the lease between the tenant and the owner.)
    * * * * *
    
    
    Secs. 982.457, 982.504, 982.505, 982.506, 982.508 and 
    982.512  [Removed]
    
        70. Remove Secs. 982.457, 982.504, 982.505, 982.506, 982.508, and 
    982.512.
        71. Revise the table of contents for Subpart K to read as follows:
    
    Subpart K--Rent and Housing Assistance Payment
    
    982.501  Overview.
    982.502  Conversion to voucher program.
    982.503   Voucher tenancy: Payment standard amount and schedule.
    982.504   Voucher tenancy: Payment standard for family in 
    restructured subsidized multifamily project.
    982.505   Voucher tenancy: How to calculate housing assistance 
    payment.
    982.506   Negotiating rent to owner.
    982.507   Rent to owner; Reasonable rent.
    982.508   Rent to owner: Maximum rent at initial occupancy.
    982.509   Rent to owner in subsidized projects.
    982.513   Other fees and charges.
    982.516  Family income and composition: Regular and interim 
    examinations.
    982.517  Utility allowance schedule.
    982.518  Regular tenancy: How to calculate housing assistance 
    payment.
    982.519  Regular tenancy: Annual adjustment of rent to owner.
    982.520  Regular tenancy: Special adjustment of rent to owner.
    982.521  Regular tenancy: Rent to owner in subsidized project.
    
        72. Revise Sec. 982.501 to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.501  Overview.
    
        (a) This subpart describes program requirements concerning the 
    housing assistance payment and rent to owner. These requirements apply 
    to the Section 8 tenant-based program.
        (b) There are two types of tenancies in the Section 8 tenant-based 
    program:
        (1) A tenancy under the voucher program.
        (2) A tenancy under the certificate program (commenced before 
    merger of the certificate and voucher programs on the merger date).
    
    [[Page 26648]]
    
        (c) Unless specifically stated, requirements of this part are the 
    same for all tenancies. Sections 982.503, 982.504, and 982.505 only 
    apply to a voucher tenancy. Sections 982.518, 982.519, 982.520, and 
    982.521 only apply to a tenancy under the certificate program.
    
    
    Secs. 982.502, 982.503, 982.507, 982.509, 982.510, 982.511, and 
    982.513  [Redesignated as Secs. 982.506, 982.507, 982.518, 982.519, 
    982.520, 982.509 and 982.510, respectively]
    
        73. Redesignate Secs. 982.502, 982.503, 982.507, 982.509, 982.510, 
    982.511, and 982.513 as Secs. 982.506, 982.507, 982.518, 982.519, 
    982.520, 982.509, and 982.510, respectively.
        74. Add new Secs. 982.502, 982.503, 982.504, 982.505, and 982.508 
    to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.502  Conversion to voucher program.
    
        (a) New HAP contracts. On and after the merger date, the PHA may 
    only enter into a HAP contract for a tenancy under the voucher program, 
    and may not enter into a new HAP contract for a tenancy under the 
    certificate program.
        (b) Over-FMR tenancy. If the PHA had entered into any HAP contract 
    for an over-FMR tenancy under the certificate program prior to the 
    merger date, on and after the merger date such tenancy shall be 
    considered and treated as a tenancy under the voucher program, and 
    shall be subject to the voucher program requirements under this part, 
    including calculation of the voucher housing assistance payment in 
    accordance with Sec. 982.505. However, Sec. 982.505(b)(2) shall not be 
    applicable for calculation of the housing assistance payment prior to 
    the effective date of the second regular reexamination of family income 
    and compostion on or after the merger date.
        (c) Voucher tenancy. If the PHA had entered into any HAP contract 
    for a voucher tenancy prior to the merger date, on and after the merger 
    date such tenancy shall continue to be considered and treated as a 
    tenancy under the voucher program, and shall be subject to the voucher 
    program requirements under this part, including calculation of the 
    voucher housing assistance payment in accordance with Sec. 982.505. 
    However, Sec. 982.505(b)(2) shall not be applicable for calculation of 
    the housing assistance payment prior to the effective date of the 
    second regular reexamination of family income and composition on or 
    after the merger date.
        (d) Regular certificate tenancy. The PHA must terminate program 
    assistance under any outstanding HAP contract for a regular tenancy 
    under the certificate program (entered prior to the merger date) at the 
    effective date of the second regular reexamination of family income and 
    composition on or after the merger date. Upon such termination of 
    assistance, the HAP contract for such tenancy terminates automatically. 
    The PHA must give at least 120 days written notice of such termination 
    to the family and the owner, and the PHA must offer the family the 
    opportunity for continued tenant-based assistance under the voucher 
    program. The PHA may deny the family the opportunity for continued 
    assistance in accordance with Secs. 982.552 and 982.553.
    
    
    Sec. 982.503  Voucher tenancy: Payment standard amount and schedule.
    
        (a) Payment standard schedule. (1) HUD publishes the fair market 
    rents for each market area in the United States (see part 888 of this 
    title). The PHA must adopt a payment standard schedule that establishes 
    voucher payment standard amounts for each FMR area in the PHA 
    jurisdiction. For each FMR area, the PHA must establish payment 
    standard amounts for each ``unit size.'' Unit size is measured by 
    number of bedrooms (zero-bedroom, one-bedroom, and so on).
        (2) The payment standard amounts on the PHA schedule are used to 
    calculate the monthly housing assistance payment for a family 
    (Sec. 982.505).
        (3) The PHA voucher payment standard schedule shall establish a 
    single payment standard for each unit size in an FMR area and, if 
    applicable, in an exception payment standard area within an FMR area.
        (b) Establishing payment standard amounts. (1)(i) The PHA may 
    establish the payment standard amount for a unit size at any level 
    between 90 percent and 110 percent of the published FMR for that unit 
    size. HUD approval is not required to establish a payment standard 
    amount in that range (``basic range'').
        (ii) The PHA may establish a separate payment standard within the 
    basic range for a designated part of an FMR area.
        (2) The PHA must request HUD approval to establish a payment 
    standard amount that is higher or lower than the basic range. HUD has 
    sole discretion to grant or deny approval of a higher or lower payment 
    standard amount. Paragraph (c) of this section describes the 
    requirements for approval of a higher payment standard amount 
    (``exception payment standard amount'').
        (c) HUD approval of exception payment standard amount. (1) HUD 
    discretion. At HUD's sole discretion, HUD may approve a payment 
    standard amount that is higher than the basic range for a designated 
    part of the fair market rent area (called an ``exception area''). HUD 
    may approve an exception payment standard amount in accordance with 
    this paragraph (c) of this section for all units, or for all units of a 
    given unit size, leased by program families in the exception area. Any 
    PHA with jurisdiction in the exception area may use the HUD-approved 
    exception payment standard amount.
        (2) Above 110 percent of FMR to 120 percent of FMR. The HUD Field 
    Office may approve an exception payment standard amount from above 110 
    percent of the published FMR to 120 percent of the published FMR if 
    such office determines that such approval is justified by either the 
    median rent method or the 40th percentile rent as described below (and 
    that such approval is also supported by an appropriate program 
    justification in accordance with paragraph (c)(4) of this section).
        (i) Median rent method. In the median rent method, HUD determines 
    the exception payment standard amount by multiplying the FMR times a 
    fraction of which the numerator is the median gross rent of the 
    exception area and the denominator is the median gross rent of the 
    entire FMR area. In this method, HUD uses median gross rent data from 
    the most recent decennial United States census, and the exception area 
    may be any geographic entity within the FMR area (or any combination of 
    such entities) for which median gross rent data is provided in 
    decennial census products.
        (ii) 40th percentile rent method. In this method, HUD determines 
    that the area exception rent equals the 40th percentile of rents to 
    lease standard quality rental housing in the exception area. HUD 
    determines the 40th percentile rent in accordance with the methodology 
    described in Sec. 888.113 of this title for determining fair market 
    rents. A PHA must present statistically representative rental housing 
    survey data to justify HUD approval.
        (3) Above 120 percent of FMR. (i) At the request of a PHA, the 
    Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian Housing may approve an 
    exception payment standard amount for the total area of a county, PHA 
    jurisdiction, or place if the Assistant Secretary determines that:
        (A) Such approval is necessary to prevent financial hardship for 
    families;
        (B) Such approval is supported by statistically representative 
    rental housing survey data to justify HUD approval in accordance with 
    the methodology described in Sec. 888.113 of this title; and
    
    [[Page 26649]]
    
        (C) Such approval is also supported by an appropriate program 
    justification in accordance with paragraph (c)(4) of this section.
        (ii) For purposes of paragraph (c)(3) of this section, the term 
    ``place'' is an incorporated place or a U.S. Census designated place. 
    An incorporated place is established by State law and includes cities, 
    boroughs, towns, and villages. A U.S. Census designated place is the 
    statistical counterpart of an incorporated place.
        (4) Program justification. (i) HUD will only approve an exception 
    payment standard amount (pursuant to paragraph (c)(2) or paragraph 
    (c)(3) of this section) if HUD determines that approval of such higher 
    amount is needed either:
        (A) To help families find housing outside areas of high poverty, or
        (B) Because voucher holders have trouble finding housing for lease 
    under the program within the term of the voucher.
        (ii) HUD will only approve an exception payment standard amount 
    (pursuant to paragraph (c)(3) of this section) after six months from 
    the date of HUD approval of an exception payment standard pursuant to 
    paragraph (c)(2) of this section for the area.
        (5) Population. The total population of HUD-approved exception 
    areas in an FMR area may not include more than 50 percent of the 
    population of the FMR area.
        (6) Withdrawal or modification. At any time, HUD may withdraw or 
    modify approval to use an exception payment standard amount.
        (7) Transition: Area exception rents approved prior to merger date. 
    Subject to paragraph (c)(6) of this section, the PHA may establish an 
    exception payment standard amount up to the amount of a HUD-approved 
    area exception rent in effect at the merger date.
        (d) HUD review of PHA payment standard schedule. (1) HUD will 
    monitor rent burdens of families assisted in a PHA's voucher program. 
    If 40 percent or more of such families occupying units of any 
    particular unit size pay more than 30 percent of adjusted income as the 
    family's share, HUD will review the PHA payment standard amount for 
    that unit size, and may require the PHA to establish an increased 
    payment standard amount within the basic range.
        (2) Upon such HUD review, HUD may require the PHA to modify the 
    payment standard amounts on the PHA payment standard schedule.
    
    
    Sec. 982.504  Voucher tenancy: Payment standard for family in 
    restructured subsidized multifamily project.
    
        (a) This section applies to tenant-based assistance under the 
    voucher program if all the following conditions are applicable:
        (1) Such tenant-based voucher assistance is provided to a family 
    pursuant to Sec. 401.421 of this title when HUD has approved a 
    restructuring plan, and the participating administrative entity has 
    approved the use of tenant-based assistance to provide continued 
    assistance for such families. Such tenant-based voucher assistance is 
    provided for a family previously receiving project-based assistance in 
    an eligible project (as defined in Sec. 401.2 of this title) at the 
    time when the project-based assistance terminates.
        (2) The family chooses to remain in the restructured project with 
    tenant-based assistance under the program and leases a unit that does 
    not exceed the family unit size;
        (3) The lease for such assisted tenancy commences during the first 
    year after the project-based assistance terminates.
        (b) The initial payment standard for the family under such initial 
    lease is the sum of the reasonable rent to owner for the unit plus the 
    utility allowance for tenant-paid utilities. (Determination of such 
    initial payment standard for the family is not subject to paragraphs 
    (c)(1) and (c)(2) of Sec. 982.505. Except for determination of the 
    initial payment standard as specifically provided in paragraph (b) of 
    this section, the payment standard and housing assistance payment for 
    the family during the HAP contract term shall be determined in 
    accordance with Sec. 982.505.)
    
    
    Sec. 982.505  Voucher tenancy: How to calculate housing assistance 
    payment.
    
        (a) Use of payment standard. A payment standard is used to 
    calculate the monthly housing assistance payment for a family. The 
    ``payment standard'' is the maximum monthly subsidy payment.
        (b) Amount of monthly housing assistance payment. The PHA shall pay 
    a monthly housing assistance payment on behalf of the family that is 
    equal to the lower of:
        (1) The payment standard minus the total tenant payment; or
        (2) The gross rent minus the total tenant payment.
        (c) Payment standard for family. (1) The payment standard is the 
    lower of:
        (i) The payment standard amount for the family unit size; or
        (ii) The payment standard amount for the size of the dwelling unit 
    rented by the family.
        (2) If the dwelling unit is located in an exception area, the PHA 
    must use the appropriate payment standard amount for the exception 
    area.
        (3) During the HAP contract term, the payment standard for a family 
    is the higher of:
        (i) The initial payment standard (at the beginning of the HAP 
    contract term), as determined in accordance with paragraphs (c)(1) and 
    (c)(2) of this section, minus any amount by which the initial rent to 
    owner exceeds the current rent to owner; or
        (ii) The payment standard, as determined in accordance with 
    paragraphs (c)(1) and (c)(2) of this section, as determined at the most 
    recent regular reexamination of family income and composition effective 
    after the beginning of the HAP contract term.
        (4) At the next regular reexamination following a change in family 
    size or composition that causes a change in family unit size during the 
    HAP contract term, and for any examination thereafter during the term:
        (i) Paragraph (c)(3)(i) of this section does not apply; and
        (ii) The new family unit size must be used to determine the payment 
    standard.
    
    
    Sec. 982.508  Rent to owner: maximum rent at initial occupancy.
    
        At the time a family initially receives tenant-based assistance for 
    occupancy of a dwelling unit, the family share may not exceed 40 
    percent of the family's monthly adjusted income.
    
    
    Sec. 982.509  [Amended]
    
        74a. Revise the section heading of newly designated Sec. 982.509 to 
    read ``Rent to owner in subsidized projects.''
        75. Amend Sec. 982.516 as follows:
        a. Revise paragraph (d)(2) as set forth below;
        b. Amend paragraph (e) by removing the reference to ``and family 
    unit size''; and
        c. Add paragraph (f) as set forth below.
    
    
    Sec. 982.516  Family income and composition: Regular and interim 
    examinations.
    
    * * * * *
        (d) * * *
        (2) At the effective date of a regular or interim reexamination, 
    the PHA must make appropriate adjustments in the housing assistance 
    payment. (For a voucher tenancy, the housing assistance payment shall 
    be calculated in accordance with Sec. 982.505. For a certificate 
    tenancy, the housing assistance payment shall be calculated in 
    accordance with Sec. 982.518.)
    * * * * *
        (f) Accuracy of family income data. The PHA must establish 
    procedures that
    
    [[Page 26650]]
    
    are appropriate and necessary to assure that income data provided by 
    applicant or participant families is complete and accurate.
        76. Add Sec. 982.521 to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.521  Regular tenancy: Rent to owner in subsidized project.
    
        For a certificate tenancy in an insured or non-insured Section 236 
    project, a Section 515 project of the Rural Development Administration, 
    a Section 202 project or a Section 221(d)(3) below market interest rate 
    project, the rent to owner is the basic rental charge (as defined in 12 
    U.S.C. 1715z-1(f)(1), minus any utility allowance for tenant-paid 
    utilities). The rent to owner may not be adjusted by applying the 
    published Section 8 annual adjustment factor, and a special adjustment 
    may not be approved.
    
    
    Sec. 982.551   [Amended]
    
        77. In Sec. 982.551, amend paragraph (b)(2) by removing the second 
    sentence, and in paragraph (b)(3) remove the phrase ``and 24 CFR part 
    813''.
        78. Amend Sec. 982.552 as follows:
        a. Amend paragraph (a)(2) to remove the phrase ``certificate or'';
        b. Revise paragraphs (b) and (c) as set forth below;
        c. Remove paragraphs (d) and (e); and
        d. Redesignate paragraph (f) as paragraph (d).
    
    
    Sec. 982.552  PHA denial or termination of assistance for family.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Requirement to deny admission or terminate assistance. (1) 
    During a reasonable time period determined by the PHA, the PHA may not 
    admit a family to the program if any member of the family has been 
    evicted from federally assisted housing for serious violation of the 
    lease.
        (2) The PHA must terminate program assistance for a family evicted 
    from housing assisted under the program for serious violation of the 
    lease.
        (3) The PHA must deny admission to the program for an applicant, or 
    terminate program assistance for a participant, if any member of the 
    family fails to sign and submit consent forms for obtaining information 
    in accordance with part 5, subparts B and F of this title.
        (4) The family must submit required evidence of citizenship or 
    eligible immigration status. See part 5 of this title for a statement 
    of circumstances in which the PHA must deny admission or terminate 
    program assistance because a family member does not establish 
    citizenship or eligible immigration status, and the applicable informal 
    hearing procedures.
        (c) Authority to deny admission or terminate assistance. (1) 
    Grounds for denial or termination of assistance. The PHA may at any 
    time deny program assistance for an applicant, or terminate program 
    assistance for a participant, for any of the following grounds:
        (i) If the family violates any family obligations under the program 
    (see Sec. 982.551). See Sec. 982.553 concerning denial or termination 
    of assistance for crime by family members.
        (ii) If any member of the family has ever been evicted from public 
    housing.
        (iii) If a PHA has ever terminated assistance under the program for 
    any member of the family.
        (iv) If any member of the family has committed fraud, bribery, or 
    any other corrupt or criminal act in connection with any Federal 
    housing program.
        (v) If the family currently owes rent or other amounts to the PHA 
    or to another PHA in connection with Section 8 or public housing 
    assistance under the 1937 Act.
        (vi) If the family has not reimbursed any PHA for amounts paid to 
    an owner under a HAP contract for rent, damages to the unit, or other 
    amounts owed by the family under the lease.
        (vii) If the family breaches an agreement with the PHA to pay 
    amounts owed to a PHA, or amounts paid to an owner by a PHA. (The PHA, 
    at its discretion, may offer a family the opportunity to enter an 
    agreement to pay amounts owed to a PHA or amounts paid to an owner by a 
    PHA. The PHA may prescribe the terms of the agreement.)
        (viii) If a family participating in the FSS program fails to 
    comply, without good cause, with the family's FSS contract of 
    participation.
        (ix) If the family has engaged in or threatened abusive or violent 
    behavior toward PHA personnel.
        (x) If the family fails to fulfill its obligations under the 
    Section 8 welfare-to-work voucher program.
        (2) PHA discretion to consider circumstances. In deciding whether 
    to deny admission or terminate assistance because of action or failure 
    to act by members of the family, the PHA has discretion to consider all 
    of the circumstances in each case, including the seriousness of the 
    case, the extent of participation or culpability of individual family 
    members, and the effects of denial or termination of assistance on 
    other family members who were not involved in the action or failure.
        (3) Exclusion of family members. In determining whether to deny 
    admission or terminate assistance, the PHA may impose, as a condition 
    of continued assistance for other family members, a requirement that 
    family members who participated in or were culpable for the action or 
    failure will not reside in the unit. The PHA may permit the other 
    members of a participant family to continue receiving assistance.
    * * * * *
        79. Amend Sec. 982.554 as follows:
        a. In paragraph (c)(4), remove the phrase ``certificate or'';
        b. Revise paragraph (c)(5) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.554  Informal review for applicant.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) * * *
        (5) A PHA determination not to grant approval of the tenancy.
    * * * * *
    
    
    Sec. 982.555   [Amended]
    
        80. In Sec. 982.555, amend paragraph (b)(4) by removing the phrase 
    ``certificate or''.
        81. Revise Sec. 982.602 to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.602  SRO: Who may reside in an SRO?
    
        A single person may reside in an SRO housing unit.
        82. Revise Sec. 982.604 to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.604 SRO: Voucher housing assistance payment.
    
        (a) For a person residing in SRO housing, the payment standard is 
    75 percent of the zero-bedroom payment standard amount on the PHA 
    payment standard schedule. For a person residing in SRO housing in an 
    exception area, the payment standard is 75 percent of the HUD-approved 
    zero-bedroom exception payment standard amount.
        (b) The utility allowance for an assisted person residing in SRO 
    housing is 75 percent of the zero bedroom utility allowance.
        83. In Sec. 982.608 revise the section heading and paragraph (a) to 
    read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.608  Congregate housing: Voucher housing assistance payment.
    
        (a) Unless there is a live-in aide:
        (1) For a family residing in congregate housing, the payment 
    standard is the zero-bedroom payment standard amount on the PHA payment 
    standard schedule. For a family residing in congregate housing in an 
    exception area, the payment standard is the HUD-approved zero-bedroom 
    exception payment standard amount.
        (2) However, if there are two or more rooms in the unit (not 
    including kitchen or sanitary facilities), the payment standard for a 
    family residing in
    
    [[Page 26651]]
    
    congregate housing is the one-bedroom payment standard amount.
    * * * * *
        84. Amend Sec. 982.613 as follows:
        a. Revise the section heading as set forth below;
        b. In paragraph (b)(2), revise the reference to ``Sec. 982.503'' to 
    read ``Sec. 982.507''; and
        Revise paragraph (c) as set forth below.
    
    
    Sec. 982.613  Group home: Rent and voucher housing assistance payment.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) Payment standard. (1) Family unit size. (i) Unless there is a 
    live-in aide, the family unit size is zero or one bedroom.
        (ii) If there is a live-in aide, the live-in aide must be counted 
    in determining the family unit size.
        (2) The payment standard for a person who resides in a group home 
    is the lower of:
        (i) The payment standard amount on the PHA payment standard 
    schedule for the family unit size; or (ii) The pro-rata portion of the 
    payment standard amount on the PHA payment standard schedule for the 
    group home size.
        (iii) If there is a live-in aide, the live-in aide must be counted 
    in determining the family unit size.
    * * * * *
        85. Amend Sec. 982.617 as follows:
        a. Revise the section heading to read as set forth below;
        b. In paragraph (b)(2) revise the reference to ``Sec. 982.503'' to 
    read ``Sec. 982.507''; and
        c. Revise paragraph (c) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.617  Shared housing: Rent and voucher housing assistance 
    payment.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) Payment standard. The payment standard for a family that 
    resides in a shared housing is the lower of:
        (1) The payment standard amount on the PHA payment standard 
    schedule for the family unit size; or
        (2) The pro-rata portion of the payment standard amount on the PHA 
    payment standard schedule for the size of the shared housing unit.
    * * * * *
    
    
    Sec. 982.619  [Amended]
    
        86. Amend Sec. 982.619 as follows:
        a. In paragraph (b)(1), revise the reference to ``Sec. 982.503'' to 
    read ``Sec. 982.507''; and
        b. In paragraph (b)(4), revise the reference to ``Sec. 982.509'' to 
    read ``Sec. 982.519'' and revise the reference to ``Sec. 982.510'' to 
    read ``Sec. 982.520''.
        87. Revise Sec. 982.623 to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 982.623  Manufactured home space rental: Housing assistance 
    payment.
    
        (a) Fair market rent. The FMR for a manufactured home space is 
    determined in accordance with Sec. 888.113(e) of this title.
        (b) Housing assistance payment: For certificate tenancy. (1) During 
    the term of a certificate tenancy (entered prior to the merger date), 
    the amount of the monthly housing assistance payment equals the lesser 
    of the amounts specified in paragraphs (b)(1)(i) or (b)(1)(ii) of this 
    section:
        (i) Manufactured home space cost minus the total tenant payment.
        (ii) The rent to owner for the manufactured home space.
        (2) ``Manufactured home space cost'' means the sum of:
        (i) The amortization cost,
        (ii) The utility allowance, and
        (iii) The rent to owner for the manufactured home space.
        (c) Housing assistance payment for voucher tenancy. (1) There is a 
    separate FMR for a family renting a manufactured home space. The FMR 
    for rental of a manufactured home space is 30 percent of the published 
    FMR for a two-bedroom unit (see FMR notices published by HUD pursuant 
    to part 888 of this title).
        (2) The payment standard shall be determined in accordance with 
    Sec. 982.505.
        (3) The PHA shall pay a monthly housing assistance payment on 
    behalf of the family that is equal to the lower of:
        (i) The payment standard minus the total tenant payment; or
        (ii) The rent paid for rental of the real property on which the 
    manufactured home owned by the family is located (``space rent'') minus 
    the total tenant payment.
        (4) The space rent is the sum of the following as determined by the 
    PHA:
        (i) Rent to owner for the manufactured home space;
        (ii) Owner maintenance and management charges for the space;
        (iii) The utility allowance for tenant-paid utilities.
    
        Dated: April 21, 1999
    Andrew Cuomo,
    Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 99-12082 Filed 5-13-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4210-32-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
05/14/1999
Department:
Housing and Urban Development Department
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Interim rule.
Document Number:
99-12082
Pages:
26632-26651 (20 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. FR-4428-I-01
RINs:
2577-AB91: Section 8 Tenant Based Assistance: Statutory Merger (FR-4428)
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/2577-AB91/section-8-tenant-based-assistance-statutory-merger-fr-4428-
PDF File:
99-12082.pdf
CFR: (85)
24 CFR 982.507)
24 CFR 248.101
24 CFR 248.141
24 CFR 248.147
24 CFR 248.165
More ...